Example sentences of "[vb past] [pers pn] at a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | The rest clambered into their saddles , and followed him unquestioningly as he led them at a canter downslope to where the hills opened out and patches of ground could be seen where the snow was melting . |
2 | He led them at a smart pace along the path where the railway had been and though they grumbled about the branches scratching their legs his sister and his brothers followed him . |
3 | I think he caught me at a vulnerable moment , when I was more worried about myself than I am now . |
4 | ‘ I 'm so sorry , Veronica , you caught me at a bad moment , ’ Loretta said apologetically . |
5 | Mind you can always say to you caught me at a bad time , you say , it 's supposed to have appointment only , but just say , can you , is there any chance of you coming back . |
6 | ‘ I know you and Niall did n't exactly get off to a good start , but if it 's any consolation you caught him at a bad time . |
7 | I think you just caught him at a bad moment . |
8 | They approached him at a steady pace as though unconcerned by his presence , but they went in single file , Allen with his hand lying lightly on the knife at his belt and Marian carrying her bow , strung , and with an arrow ready notched , lightly and inconspicuously in her left hand . |
9 | There was a small gap in the fence that was unaffected by the pile-up and we approached it at a forty-five degree angle . |
10 | The Labour administration approved the scheme wholeheartedly in 1986 , and used it at a public inquiry to try to oppose the imposition of more A-road architecture on the site approved by the previous Tory administration . |
11 | Or scanned you at a maiden aunt 's , |
12 | ‘ Is all well ? ’ he asked when she joined him at a small table in a corner of the crowded bar . |
13 | I mean , alright , we know you 're handling large lumps of money , but when you think of it , if you , if you , borrowed it at a different rate , you know , same rate as you could do finance , 'cos which I think the government could do it and make a profit at it . |
14 | Instead of bowling the ball , which bore a small silver shield , Mr Cottle threw it at a low-flying swan . |
15 | Gaily followed them at a discreet distance and watched as they lowered Miss Faith Lavender into her last resting place . |
16 | Billy rowed across and followed her at a discreet distance . |
17 | As they walked he offered her his arm , unlike most punters , who followed her at a discreet distance . |
18 | Behind her Rose followed her at a wheezing trot , keeping up with her , until she suddenly mastered the antiquated machine , and sped away , feeling like a Swiss mountaineer with his St Bernard dog , setting off on his errand of mercy . |
19 | None the less , it was felt , firstly by societies themselves of course but eventually by government , that the existing rules , based on ideas which dated remember from the eighteenth century , placed them at a serious disadvantage . |
20 | Say , ‘ You lost him at an early age , did n't you ? ’ and I 'll say , ‘ Lost him ? |
21 | He met her at a literary dinner a couple of weeks later . |
22 | He led her at a good trot through the country lanes , by Bramfield and Tattle Hill , through Thieves Lane to Hertingfordbury . |
23 | We first met him at an elegant hotel in the ‘ uptown ’ district of Manhattan , New York , overlooking Central park , a watering place well known to artists ( Joe Cocker also happened to be in residence at the time ) . |
24 | Where a member of a board is not re-elected to the authority which appointed him at an ordinary election , he remains a board member until the first meeting of the authority after the election . |
25 | The tired horse faced a journey of at least twenty miles across heavy country so he kept her at a sedate trot . |
26 | So she advertised it at a knock-down price , and then invented a competitive bid to hurry you into signing on the dotted line . |
27 | Pitching the F1 as a ‘ super-bike ’ , he sold it at a retail price of £13,000 . |
28 | They bought them at a substantial discount . |
29 | If his remarkable strategic instinct convinced him at an early stage that it would be necessary to negotiate with the FLN , his obvious repugnance at the process caused major problems . |
30 | The question was asked : we know that he is a sound and effective Prime Minister ; but is he also a leader who can save the Conservative Party from the fate that undoubtedly awaited it at a general election had Mrs Thatcher remained in office ? |