Example sentences of "[adv] [prep] [pers pn] at [art] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | ‘ Do n't imagine you can take it out on me because things have not gone right for you at the party . |
2 | Wilcox waited impatiently for her at the bottom of the final staircase . |
3 | He 's come round to both our Joe and our Tamar and , heaven knows , he was bitter enough against them at the start . ’ |
4 | This completes the picture of the perfect rock'n'roll group ; a tidal wave of Jack Daniels coolness , that carried all before it at the Stadium . |
5 | You know especially to me at the moment . |
6 | ‘ Great brutes , liable to trample all over you at the drop of a hat . ’ |
7 | Diane Bailey , the Curtis Cup captain , seized on the Jacklin example and so did Geoff Marks and all around him at the Walker Cup in ‘ 89 , and their teams responded magnificently . |
8 | Alice looked all around her at the flowers and the trees , but she could not see anything to eat . |
9 | Scotland seem to have got away with it at the moment . |
10 | I 'm away from her at the moment ; perhaps you guessed . |
11 | He jumped brilliantly and I decided to put the pressure on to get away from them at the top of the hill . |
12 | We 'll ride away from them at the walk . ’ |
13 | The same powers which took my friend 's video away from him at the airport and threatened his livelihood into the bargain , have routinely been used against our whole culture . |
14 | The Tirajana apartments are ideal for those wishing to enjoy the nightlife and then get away from it at the end of the day . |
15 | If they were still with him at the end of tomorrow , he could complain , but not until then . |
16 | Bureaux de Change operators Travelex — with booths at airports and ferry terminals — will let you change back any currency you bring back home with you at the rate you bought at if the markets move against you . |
17 | Close to it at a March meeting in 1585 accusations of a theft of some Scottish spurs and counter-accusations of ‘ a pretended matter beforehand ’ began to fly to and fro , until without warning someone on the Scottish side shot and killed Russell . |
18 | He came straight to us at the castle , and told us how he had found the body , and no question but he was greatly shaken and agitated , as well he might be , guilty or innocent . |
19 | Actually erm I 'm not really into it at the moment because I ca n't sort of make myself get in there , you know ? |
20 | The most popular halting place on the Mallaig road occurs midway along it at the village of Glenfinnan where romance is allied to scenic beauty of a high order . |
21 | ‘ I hear things are n't going too well for you at the moment . ’ |
22 | The doctor 's trying some different medication , and we seem to be doing quite well with it at the moment . ’ |
23 | ‘ You will bring them here to me at the fall of the Purple Hour . ’ |
24 | Fortunately for us at the time there was not the amount of light flak associated with later years , or that which was spawned by some of the Cheshire low level attacks . |
25 | When they do become ill the John Warin ward in Oxford is there for them at every stage . |
26 | ‘ Bulgarian women have babies in hedges , ’ he said , looking vaguely about him at the north end of Sixth Avenue . |
27 | How many people would be working there with you at the time roughly ? |
28 | Standing there beside him at the water 's edge , she looked down at his reflection , next to her own in the still , clear water . |
29 | There was no sign of them in the next field , but ahead of him at the top of the hill he saw the young dog , looking black against the morning sky . |
30 | Standing on that base , felt as solid but as yet unexamined , he can look ahead of him at the task , which is writing , in possession of the means to carry out that task , which is his language , but suddenly that vision is revealed as fantasy . |