Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [verb] at the [noun sg] " in BNC.
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31 | If in fact a charge is already registered then as the land certificate is already notionally deposited at the registry no difficulty would appear to occur and registration can take place . |
32 | But I 've just briefly looked at the education and training part of the General Secretary report and it says here , National College rammed a hundred and twenty four courses over a thirty week period attracting approximately seventeen hundred G M B representatives , a wide range of residential courses . |
33 | He turned away , and went downstairs again to drink at the bar . |
34 | These doubts were still widely encountered at the time of the 1840 Convention but a debate there and at the 1843 meeting stimulated the search for a reliable supply of free-labour cotton to reduce dependence on the slaveholders of the American South . |
35 | Reading and eating were always metaphorically linked at the time . |
36 | JOHN KING steered Tranmere to a new high on Saturday but revealed ‘ I 'm still not looking at the league table . ’ |
37 | Accommodation is a significant driving factor in the process of new dialect formation as described by Trudgill ( 1986 ) , but it is more easily studied at the level of individuals who adjust their language behaviour given a particular set of circumstances . |
38 | Used in this way , a chart would probably be more effective because it may be larger and more easily seen at the back of the class . |
39 | yeah that 's right , I meant to ask you , do the tills ever not balance at the Co-Op ? |
40 | A former actor , Cooke started work on the book after growing ever more frustrated at the lack of decent roles . |
41 | Yeah , the hands , no structure , did you notice he hardly ever looked at the magistrate , although yeah his voice projection was still good because he 's an experienced advocate , but he was talking to the table nearly the whole time . |
42 | Wordsworth 's later views on home affairs will be more appropriately discussed at the end of Chapter 2 . |
43 | If , therefore , the pointer reads " here " and we blink our eyes and look at it again we shall certainly find the pointer the second time still stolidly sitting at the mark " here " . |
44 | With this sort of hierarchical team , the possibility of idiosyncratic judgements is minimized , and with the control of the recording in the supervisors ' hands , errors are more readily noted at the time they occur and can be corrected or allowed for in the subsequent analysis . |
45 | This procedure is sometimes followed when a " branch " county court has a long defended action which is more conveniently heard at the judge 's main court in some large town . |
46 | Certainly it seems likely that women will find themselves ever more firmly trapped at the bottom of the office hierarchy as a result of the introduction of information technology . |
47 | It had long been held as a general axiom — quite incorrectly , as Catalonian experience showed — that entail caused a régime of short , unstable leases and once again stood at the head of the estorbos , the impediments to progress . |
48 | Germany does once again lie at the heart of Europe . |
49 | This was the brainchild of Francesco de Carerra , a senior legislator in Padua , and it amounted to a padlock that closed the vaginal labia tight by the simple expedient of passing right through them — or as it was more decorously phrased at the time ‘ locked up the seat of voluptuousness ’ . |
50 | He said what he most probably felt at the time , which was the heat of the moment . |
51 | The continuity of martial values is also brilliantly suggested at the end when Coriolanus 's son ritually receives his father 's sword from Volumnia while his mother looks grievingly on . |
52 | Given its height and vigour , L. serotina is probably best accommodated at the back of a herbaceous border or in the wild garden if you are lucky enough to have such a place . |
53 | Oh , but I forgot , Buddy is a ‘ genuine fan ’ ( ha , ha ) who probably just stands at the back , looking at everybody else wondering whom he can slag . |
54 | Oh , but I forgot , Buddy is a ‘ genuine fan ’ ( ha , ha ) who probably just stands at the back , looking at everybody else wondering whom he can slag . |
55 | Ironically , at the time both were leading such hectic lives that even though they were both still living at the family home in Melbourne they had almost no time to spend together . |
56 | They were both still laughing at the memory when the off sales bell rang . |
57 | He flicked his own eyes towards the rear seat , and his heart leapt as the black man 's eyes narrowed slightly then glanced at the figure in the back . |
58 | He will continue to head up Olivetti Research Ltd 's UK labs in Cambridge mdash ; which he also helped to set up — but will also direct research at the firm 's Pozzuoli facility in southern Italy , where he replaces Piercarlo Ravasio . |
59 | Ing C Olivetti & Co SpA has appointed Acorn Computers Ltd founder , Dr Andrew Hopper as director of corporate research : he will continue to head up Olivetti Research Ltd 's UK laboratories in Cambridge — which he also helped to set up — but will also direct research at the firm 's Pozzuoli facility in southern Italy , where he replaces Piercarlo Ravasio ; he reports to Lucio Pinto , executive vice-president , technology strategy and corporate research . |
60 | This collection , often inadequately reviewed at the time , but now seen as the heart of his poetic achievement , contains poems described by Hardy himself as ‘ possibly among the best I have written ’ . |