Example sentences of "[noun prp] have [vb pp] at [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Benny had looked at the cream-coloured blouses and soft pink angora sweaters .
2 Aunt Fosters had died at the right time .
3 Saxe-Weimar had arrived at the very nick of time .
4 Mickey has played at the highest level and he gets the same thing out of the game as he has always done .
5 Instead of flying straight to the United States , the Shah had decided at the last minute to accept an invitation from Anwar Sadat of Egypt to pause briefly in Aswan .
6 This was the first time in the 47 years of its history that the UN had met at the top level .
7 The charges against Mr Perez have come at an inconvenient moment , not only for him but also for Venezuela .
8 Harry had realized at an early stage , however , that he would need to keep a clear head if he was to remember all he was told .
9 In that case , it was logical to assume that Guy Sterne had decided at the last minute to avail himself of his unexpectedly empty villa for an impromptu break in the sun .
10 His Heswall colleague , Ian Spencer , is the only player from Merseyside to have succeeded at the pre-qualifying stage for the school and will be in France next week .
11 Twelve years ago , he said , President Ronald Reagan had stood at the same podium and said if the national debt were stacked in $1,000 bills , ‘ the stack would reach 67 miles into space .
12 And Africans — ANC leaders and trades unionists tell us , ‘ MRA has come at the right moment . ’
13 Wendy had worked at a local hospital as a clerk in medical records before giving up work to look after her children .
14 It was to this area that the Hasteds had come at the very beginning of the 19th century ; previously their home had been in the City , in the parishes of St Katherine Coleman and St Olave , Hart Street , but like many of their contemporaries they made the pilgrimage east .
15 Her mummy had once shown her photographs of herself as a Brownie many years ago , and Angela had laughed at the funny straw hat and long frock she had worn .
16 Harry looked round desperately for the O'Hanlons to assist him , but the O'Hanlons had fainted at the very outset and had been dragged clear by Ram , who was now trying to fan them back to consciousness with a copy of the Illustrated London News .
17 Behind the garden were several acres of rough pasture , which Mr Coleby had bought at the same time as he bought the strip of wasteland that linked the pasture to Champney Road .
18 Count Tolstoy 's co-defendant , Nigel Watts had said at an earlier hearing that he had never intended to push the whole debt on to the historian .
19 She was , as Clara had discovered at an early age , colossally inconsistent ; and sometimes Clara thought that it might have been easier to live with a true religious fanatic , whose fads and fancies would be at least predictable and well-marshalled , with the backing of some kind of external authority , from which there could be some appeal .
20 In reminding himself that his responsibilities were for the President , he recalled the way that Mariana had looked at the old man that first day when he had met them out on the dock , the President casting for bonefish .
21 They had met a fortnight after Meg 's arrival when Alice had called at the Old Rectory with a suitcase of jumble for the annual sale in aid of St Andrew 's Church in Lydsett .
22 Hasegawa had collapsed at the Imperial Palace on Sept. 3 with a suspected cerebral stroke .
23 Already during the uncanny calm of the ‘ phoney war ’ in the winter of 1939–40 , Hitler had hinted at a successful end to the conflict during 1940 , and at the same time had further blamed England and France for deliberately prolonging the war through their influence on previously neutral countries .
24 The back door of the Old Rectory , giving access to the scullery , was normally left open during daylight hours and an inner door to the house locked , but Alice Mair had knocked at the front door and made herself known .
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