Example sentences of "[coord] [verb] [adv] at the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Acyclovir given intravenously , orally or applied directly at the site of infection can accelerate healing and restrict the spread and recurrence of many herpes infections ( British Medical Journal , 1982 , vol 285 , p 1223 . ) . |
2 | Hormone replacement therapy consists of the hormones oestrogen and progesterone taken daily to help replace those lost or produced erratically at the menopause . |
3 | Is it really necessary for you to have no claim if you are indeed made redundant or treated unjustly at the time when the contract finishes ? |
4 | But much of what they buy ends up being returned or hidden away at the back of a drawer . |
5 | No hair-stroking or sighing or staring sorrowfully at the ceiling , not for her . |
6 | Felicity had come out in a severe facial rash and spent the time either screaming or staring fixedly at the paperknife on her desk . |
7 | Dexter sat back in his armchair , unsure whether to laugh outright or smile knowingly at the businessman 's practical joke . |
8 | It was shabby but civilised , alive with history but inhabited also by living poets and thinkers who could be found squatting on the slotted metal floors of the stacks , or arguing pleasantly at the turning of the stair . |
9 | Although probably built as a row by some Victorian property magnate , all the houses were slightly different from the front and all had been built on to or extended differently at the back . |
10 | Do n't choose a colour for its safety , because it is acceptable , or sells well at the art society exhibition . |
11 | The healthy stayed away , or hovered sceptically at the back of the crowd , talking as they waited for the first miracle . |
12 | But on Monday night the audience at the Queen Elizabeth Hall appeared neatly divided — between those who were willing to prolong the applause indefinitely and those who either disappeared discreetly halfway through or scarpered quickly at the end . |
13 | He went back , took a hoe from inside the door of his house and stabbed furiously at the cabbage patch , trying to rearrange the furrows in neat order . |
14 | He stopped , confused , by the bus stop opposite the Protestant Truth Society , and gazed unseeingly at the list of routes . |
15 | He puffed furiously on his pipe and gazed dreamily at the ceiling . |
16 | With some deliberation , he withdrew his arms from under the bedclothes and gazed tiredly at the backs of his hands . |
17 | Katherine lay on the bed which had become hers and gazed blankly at the ceiling . |
18 | He took another sip of whisky and gazed thoughtfully at the ceiling . |
19 | Wholesome cooking used to mean a whole lot of work … not least of it , reaching up to the grill , and scrubbing away at the oven and hotplate . |
20 | I was standing motionless by the desk , and gazing vacantly at the letter , when I heard some footsteps outside the door . |
21 | Foinavon had been trained by Tom Dreaper in Ireland for Arkle 's owner Anne , Duchess of Westminster , but while in Dreaper 's charge had been notable mainly for his extraordinarily laid-back demeanour : in a chase at Baldoyle he was in the lead when falling at the third fence , throwing Pat Taaffe well clear , but Foinavon did not bother to scramble to his feet , preferring to remain on the ground and pick quietly at the grass beside him . |
22 | I quickly learned that pointing the camera and flash straight at the glass of the aquarium did not work . |
23 | Bob tips in a portion of hops at the start of the boil and adds more at the end for aroma . |
24 | We could have come over to Bruges in the evening and dined together at the Duc de Bourgogne . ’ |
25 | as if on cue , they heard footsteps on the back stairs at that moment , and Tom himself entered the kitchen after crossing the back porch and knocking briefly at the door . |
26 | He was clean-shaven , in the Norman manner , leaving open to view a face broad at brow and well provided with strong and shapely bone , a lean jaw , and a full , firm mouth , long-lipped and mobile , and quirking upward at the corners to match a certain incalculable spark in his eye . |
27 | BLUE PLANET 's sensational photography explores continents and oceans , and looks too at the forces that influence our environment : storms , volcanoes , earthquakes , typhoons and , perhaps the most powerful of all , Mankind . |
28 | With mounting excitement which neither betrayed they moved over to the desk and peered intently at the blotter . |
29 | He put on his glasses , walked over to the windows , and peered closely at the titles of the books . |
30 | One or two of the braver spirits moved closer to the road and peered across at the grass . |