Example sentences of "[adv] [adv prt] at [art] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 To Ronni 's surprise , and apparently also to Guido 's , Silvia stared humbly down at the ground for a moment .
2 Testing for 14 year olds has been almost as great a disaster : the first pilot scheme was abandoned halfway through at a cost of £8 million .
3 it was all over at the start of the second half … it took Millwall just 17 seconds and ten touches to win the game …
4 If the Government spends less than the budget says it would spend during the year , then it is obviously better off at the end of the year and can then spend more or repay borrowings or reduce taxes .
5 If you tire of the beach and the windsurfers , pedalos or sailing dinghies — all included in the price of course — join the games and competitions run all day long back at the Club by the entertainments team .
6 Meanwhile over at The Theatre in Chipping Norton Mother Goose has found a novel way of beating the recession .
7 Meanwhile back at the Ministry of Defence George was not back at the Ministry .
8 Paige said nothing , but stared morosely out at the wall of water .
9 But the van driver was already round at the back of his vehicle , unloading boxes .
10 A short distance further on at the foot of the side-valley of Deepdale and snugly sheltered by a background of trees , is the Methodist Chapel of Deepdale , a survivor amongst the many Methodist chapels in the district that have ceased to provide services and been sold .
11 Way back at the beginning of the club 's history there was a Ramsbottom as hall porter , and the wags in the club shortened it to Ramsbum .
12 There was a man way back at the beginnin' of this century made an elixir of it , sent it to all the crowned heads of Europe , the Pope , too .
13 If you happened to be megafabulously famous way back at the start of the '70s , the problems are literally multiplied twentyfold .
14 Way back at the start of this year I planned into the workshop schedule an exhibition piece .
15 She said I should pay her more attention , I was always round at the Club with my drinking mates .
16 ‘ Rotherham are right up at the top of the table and they are there on merit .
17 right up at the side of you ?
18 ‘ And it 's straight on at the lights for the Butcher Building , by the way . ’
19 Small signs of a Conservative Party ‘ turquoise tendency ’ had emerged from the Bow Group which criticised the UK for ‘ trailing lamely along at the back of the international pack ’ and proposed a new Clean Air Act to halve the output of SO&sub2 ; .
20 No no no no there was nobody , now er probably up at the top of Gallway there though one or two would have er stables I should think , one or two of those houses , but by and large no I should n't think so .
21 He got up in his night-shirt and looked incredulously out at the twigs of the stately chestnut tree in front of the castle .
22 The owner 's wife looked nervously out at the throng from behind her lace curtains .
23 I like it because it 's old , and grey , and dark , and yet I hate — ’ He did not finish what he was saying , staring angrily up at the windows on the top floor of his house .
24 Whereas the West Mainland never goes really up at the end of the sentence or at least not to the same extent .
25 They were now back at the beginning of their conversation , which was not very helpful .
26 The night before last we saw a racoon swaying mindlessly around at the side of the road under the influence of headlights .
27 From the walls framed aldermen stared blandly down at the gathering of some five hundred local people , mostly women , mostly in their twenties and thirties .
28 The buskers were at Leicester Square , deep down at the level of the Piccadilly Line .
29 Aggie looked from the child to the heap of rags , then down at the mountain of clothes covering her own body .
30 He looked at the still slightly smoking hole in the couch , just beside where he 'd sat , then up at the holes in the ceiling .
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