Example sentences of "[pers pn] be [verb] at that [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I was looking at that bloke in the Metro going fuck me
2 Somebody like me , if I was stood at that table , I mean okay if you 've got kids coming in , but if you get adults coming in , I would n't be able to answer questions , I do n't know enough about the product .
3 well my thoughts had cristalized that we would have to change the direction of er , we communicating with them as we 've done in the past , we could n't just use adverts that we might have used regional in a regional press , we had to pick out the point , in the , in the actual article so that four example there were six or seven points that had clearly been made , statements that had been made , I had to devise a scheme then , er , it was only a scheme in my thinking that actually , I had to devise a scheme that would pick up each of these points encounter them , now there was no way I could simply take an advert out and say , they said this , we say that because that would have had no credibility , so what I was thinking at that time is how we might be able to use some other form of being able to counter those six or seven points and I started to come up with an idea perhaps using a third party , because in our business , third party recommendation are very , very powerful and when selling to the elderly because they do not take , I 'm sorry , they take a long time to come to a decision , they mull over it and such like , they take a lot of influence from people , take advise from family , accountants , solicitors , bank managers and such like , so the idea of having a third party in a sense recommend then would have allowed us to get over those particular points , so that 's what was germinating in my mind at the time
4 I was screaming at that critic who admires The White Hotel .
5 It came to me as I listened that I did n't want to be anywhere else in the world at that moment , that what I was feeling at that moment justified all I had been through , because all I had been through was my being there .
6 You do C D space put , so you 're pointing at that directory , and then if you do M D ninety three , M D space ninety three , and then I 've created a sub-directory in ninety three , below this directory .
7 You 're looking at that meat there and you 're wondering what nationality it is ! ’
8 twenty five grand a year an and you 're sat at that desk and you 're boss ?
9 Er , and that , you , you 'll at the town cooking dinner , watching television , talking to my friend , or just roughly what you 're doing at that time that conversation took place , okay , at work , form , then make me a cup of tea , she was photo-copying ,
10 ‘ I 'm not sure I approve of the way you were looking at that visitor , ’ he went on , bending towards her and speaking quietly .
11 ‘ I have had a letter from Maureen in which she says Niazy has written to her , telling her she was involved at that time and while he is in prison , she will stay in prison .
12 Suddenly , she was staring at that mouth .
13 Sara said that she was standing at that window when she noticed the light in the office .
14 Erm but the pre-enquiry meeting is taking place tomorrow and we are represented at that meeting John is going along .
15 If nationalized industries previously had bad performances , they would have been worth little had they been sold at that stage .
16 I find myself looking over my shoulder to see what it is they 're looking at that way .
17 They were developed at that time as a useful product for the , for the menfolk .
18 They were withdrawn at that time but enacted in 1894 along with provisions ‘ to introduce local self-government into rural parishes ’ ( Redlich and Hirst 1958:216 ) .
19 They were interrupted at that moment as Janice came hurrying over to greet them .
20 This would put applicants in a very false position , perhaps drive away very talented applicants who might think that there were fewer places available for them , but also to encourage people who might in fact be struggling to go to any university in the country , it might encourage them to apply and to have a reasonable expectation of success because their sporting abilities were outstanding , they would then be disappointed because they would not be admitted and if they were admitted at that level , they would probably have a very unfortunate time at Oxford .
21 Mrs Short : The way they were talking at that meeting George is going to residential school .
22 He were looking at that bus .
23 On some occasions it may not be of great importance to the patient 's health whether he is treated at that time or perhaps at all .
24 Oh , he 's looking at that lock there .
25 Well now , taking taking into account the fact that there are about three hundred schools here in Oxfordshire and there 's only one school so far that has chosen to even try to opt out , and it was defeated at that school , then I see that is erm a comment on the kind of Education Authority we have here .
26 They should have been resolved in December nineteen ninety two because it was decided at that summit that there would be eighteen extra seats for er the then er united Germany .
27 It was noted at that time that there were low level information technology utilisation in the departments , consequently the cost of implementation would be a major factor when considering the design of either system .
28 It was felt at that meeting that another bolt debate was required to further air the views of all parties active in the Clwyd arena .
29 It was forbidden at that time to bring wildlife to school .
30 He considers that the nineteenth century cases of Camplin , Flattery and Williams accomplished no more than to include within rape sexual intercourse with an unconscious woman or one deceived by a specific type of fraud and that the 1976 Act merely declares the law as it was established at that time .
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