Example sentences of "[coord] [vb past] at [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Fair-haired Jews from Moscow and Leningrad mingled with olive-skinned Georgians to read the Cyrillic slogans welcoming them and then sank down in rows of plastic chairs or gazed at the panoramic photograph of Jerusalem covering an entire wall . |
2 | Although these are sometimes slavishly historical , or played at a frenetic tempo ( as if over-eager to cast off the stately past ) , the benefits of such experiments are clear . |
3 | I stood up and gazed at a small pile of my toys which had been thrown to one side of my cupboard . |
4 | She sat there , her feet on tiptoe , just reaching the black and white floor , and gazed at the glazed bumps of the linen towel hanging from a hook on the back of the door , the little wash-basin shaped like a scallop shell , the black and white edging of the tiles above . |
5 | When I made no response he turned and gazed at the far line of coral reef that was marked by a fret of white breaking water . |
6 | Victoria , oddly quenched , sat at Aunt Margaret 's feet and gazed at the shifting patterns in the fire , singing to herself a wordless , keening song . |
7 | Helen leaned over my shoulder and gazed at the long lines of boy scouts , girl guides , ex-servicemen , with half the population of the town packed on the pavements , watching . |
8 | She went up to the bedroom and gazed at the old four-poster , hardly noticing the faded splendour of its blue and gold canopy as she scrutinised the decorated wooden frieze that ran along the top . |
9 | Nevertheless they mounted and rode at a good trot up the great road towards the north . |
10 | The deepest area is a central depression some 2500km long and 1500km wide , surrounding the North Pole and oriented at a right angle to Greenland ( Figure 5.2 ) . |
11 | The main problem with MI6 at the time was that all the senior people were amateurs who had joined MI6 only because they had gone to the right school , wore the right sort of tie and dined at the right clubs . |
12 | She ran her lithe tongue over the helmet of his quivering rod , and sucked at the trembling shaft like an angel from heaven . |
13 | Springing up , he took two steps across to it and peered at the glazed array of schoolboy faces . |
14 | He tore open the cupboard door and peered at the tiny porthole of glass on the front of the central heating boiler . |
15 | Sims took out a jeweller 's eyeglass and peered at the tiny negatives . |
16 | He frowned deeply and peered at the narrow line of black and white spaces hanging in the air in front of him . |
17 | They both knelt on the carpet and peered at the large magazine , turning the pages . |
18 | The Weasel stepped up to the horse and peered at the dishevelled figure . |
19 | Finally the iron pin would be attached to the hinge fitting , pointed at the catch-plate and coiled at the other end to form a spring hinge . |
20 | He sat and thought somberly about Kegan , keeping his chin tucked into his neck and his eyes on the toes of his outstretched feet , as people clutching clipboards bustled about , and men wearing earphones and pulling the attached wires behind them moved importantly from place to place and shouted at the invisible listeners who spoke to them through the earphones . |
21 | The Archon ignored him , stood up and shouted at the disappearing figure . |
22 | He took the wheel after that and drove at a furious speed back to San José , where he turned right on to the Pan-Am . |
23 | He let go the clutch , lifted the front wheel and drove at the far bank , sand-spit dead ahead . |
24 | ‘ No , your Grace , for when he mustered what force he had left and drove at the Welsh knights , he could both ride and fight , and so did , and well . |
25 | Turning to football , the West Indies have done nothing on an international scale , though the game is popular and played at a domestic level . |
26 | Frankie narrowed his eyes and squinted at the bloody object lying between her powerful front paws . |
27 | Petion saw her go from the corner of his eye , and fired at the crouching figures on the freighter 's deck with grim determination . |
28 | Delaney shook Lawton by the hand , and nodded at the other faces , regarding them levelly . |
29 | In 1984 , radio astronomers from Columbia University identified electro-magnetic vortices in our Milky Way and arrived at a similar conclusion to the theories of Alfven and Perratt . |
30 | She was kept in training as a five-year-old with her main target the Ascot Gold Cup , and arrived at the Royal meeting unbeaten in her two earlier races that season : never much of a betting proposition once her ability became apparent , Pretty Polly started at 1000–35 on in the March Stakes at Newmarket and at 11–2 on in the Coronation Cup at Epsom ( despite the presence in the latter of the 1904 Derby winner St Amant ) . |