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

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1 Jamie and I sit down at a side table to wait .
2 I 'm watching Chris and Dave fool around at a disc presentation ceremony , a routine they 're well versed in by now , and talking kilt tartans to Matt Cameron from Soundgarden , who were due to play here with Guns N' Roses the following night but the gig 's been cancelled .
3 Based on an 8km circuit of the Can and Chelmer , teams could opt to race 40 or 80km and change over at the race centre as often as they liked .
4 Around the south of Ithaka , stop off at a day anchorage for lunch and a swim , then into Port Vathi , capital of Ithaka .
5 I look over at the changing room .
6 and Hereford are back in action tomorrow night … they 're playing Torquay at home in the Coca Cola cup … while Swindon kick off at the County Ground against Oldham on Wednesday …
7 and Hereford are back in action tomorrow night … they 're playing Torquay at home in the Coca Cola cup … while Swindon kick off at the County Ground against Oldham on Wednesday …
8 This card may be placed face up at the table edge or with the unit to indicate that it is affected .
9 This card may be placed next to the model or face up at the table edge to indicate that it is in play .
10 Stand here and look up at the River Esk a famous salmon fishing river ; and across the river at St. Mary 's church , at the top of 199 steps , furnished by local shipwrights .
11 Look up at the car clock , or whatever ?
12 In the first of three parts we look back at the working life of country people featured in ’ Twenty-Four Square Miles ’
13 ( Look back at the Cliff Gallup solos we covered in June and July and you 'll notice he did just that , too . )
14 Still , we make fun of the titanic , we look back at the romans-christians thing with a sense of romance … why not the munich ‘ disaster ’ .
15 Connon took a last look back at the gathering gloom before he stepped into the house .
16 I look around at the milling people , imagining we 'll be split up into smaller groups and led through the blank doors to sit in armchairs and watch a TV set on some kind of plinth .
17 This somehow led to a discussion on local football and I discovered that there were eleven fit men and true down at the Kingdom Hall .
18 That poor unfortunate had to stoke the fire , pump the tilly lamps , dash upstream to unblock the water pipe , boil the kettle — on the open fire — and arrive back at the card table an exhausted , nervous wreck .
19 ‘ Some of it really moves me , and some of it cracks me up — kinda what you go through at a birthday party . ’
20 ‘ Some of it really moves me , and some of it cracks me up — kinda what you go through at a birthday party . ’
21 Well , the speedway season is upon us ; tapes go up at the Oxford Stadium on Friday .
22 It was just one of those things that happened to even the nicest people , and the sensible thing to do about it was pay £25 and turn up at a London hotel for a glass of sherry and an implicit promise of no humiliation if things did n't work out .
23 There will be a welcome for all who turn up at the Wallingford terminus for bumper picnic on Sunday .
24 Every week , around 80 people turn up at the Prestbury Road Handicapped Day Centre in Cheltenham .
25 And although hundreds of young hopefuls turn up at the Storm offices in London each year most of Sarah 's ‘ finds ’ are chance encounters .
26 Eventually they end up at a reprocessing plant where they are ground into tiny flakes , washed and dried .
27 But this ruse gives a chance for Nestor and the gallery of small time crooks and pimps to be transported to Devil 's Island , an escape on a raft in a storm and end up at the North Pole for a sequence with a dancing penguin and a polar bear , to give the show a Christmas gloss .
28 Call in at a Booking Agent .
29 ‘ Charlie , yer best call in at the police station on yer way to work tomorrer mornin' . ’
30 Oh yes er I think somebody kept it around father 's day , a chap named , but it was a beautiful old place and he always , because my father always used to erm start off about seven o'clock in the morning to walk down to Walkers and er call in at the White Hart because they were open at six o'clock in the morning , for a rum and coffee for about tuppence or thruppence , then he always used to er go to his mother 's for his breakfast and er he used to go down and see all the men start off and then , then slip over to his mother 's , she lived on the Road and er she , for years and years this went on that he had his break he never had his breakfast at home he 'd start off going down there and come back to his mother 's , but he always stopped at the White Hart for his rum and coffee
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