Example sentences of "[vb mod] [verb] [pron] at the [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | He should throw himself at the Doctor 's back , grapple with him , break the machinery at which he was working . |
2 | Now , I must welcome him at the door . |
3 | As I hinted parenthetically following the quotation from Clark , it seems perverse for him to insist that we must choose one at the expense of the other . |
4 | Anyone interested in learning more about this scheme should contact us at the address below , or on . |
5 | NO SNOW fell during the night and at 10.00 , after Erika had run her five kilometres under a dazzling blue sky , Karl ran and said that he thought he rather did that a brief tour of Berlin would be possible and that he would be waiting in the lounge of the Palast at 11.00 ; adding that Paul should meet them at the television Tower at 1.00 |
6 | He put on his shirt and suggested she should wash herself at the sink . |
7 | You 're my family , and you must meet me at the bridge . ’ |
8 | ‘ I regret I must leave you at the door , Lady Isabel . |
9 | You must get it at the end counter . ’ |
10 | At the end of the nineteen twenties the policy from Moscow , not just to the Chinese Communist Party but actually to communist parties all over the world swings dramatically to the left and Stalin is arguing that there 's , there are going to be revolutionary explosions all over the world the Communist Party must forge its own path , it must put itself at the head of these struggles , it must give a lead to the masses by launching insurrections and so on and so forth . |
11 | Right then , I 'll met you at the Co-op |
12 | I only took a wee bit , leave it there and I 'll eat it at the end of the day . |
13 | Sit down on your bottom and I 'll catch you at the bottom , right you ready ? |
14 | He 'll sacrifice nothing at the expense of quality , knowing that the customer will sacrifice him instantly if the quality of his goods or services is poor . |
15 | In case you did n't get that down , we 'll repeat it at the end of the programme . |
16 | ‘ In the meantime , I 'll expect you at the office on Monday morning . |
17 | I 'll expect you at the Presbytery in a few days with your donation . ’ |
18 | Yeah , cos I might , I might see you at the station if you get the train . |
19 | I 've told her I 'll see her at the funeral , though I suppose it wo n't be for a while . |
20 | ‘ You 'll see them at the wedding , ’ said my mother . |
21 | I 'll see you at the inquest . ’ |
22 | So I 'll see you at the course tomorrow . ’ |
23 | ‘ I do hope that 's not my lasagne I can smell burning , my dear , ’ and while she moved swiftly to check the oven and to find that not a thing was burning , Naylor was saying , ‘ We 'll see you at the weekend , Travis . ’ |
24 | ‘ I 'll see you at the weekend , then , ’ Leith said lightly , and was once more wanting to do something of a pugilistic nature to her employer when , just as though he lived there , he went to the door with Travis and saw him out . |
25 | Right , I 'll see you at the weekend . |
26 | I 'll see you at the end of April . ’ |
27 | I 'm looking forward to Hamlet , but I wo n't bother you at the theatre ; I 'll see you at the flat . |
28 | ‘ I 'll see you at the office on Monday morning , ’ Damian told her as he walked her home in the hot , humid night to her own villa next door and cicadas buzzed metallically as they walked past the fountain . |
29 | ‘ I 'll see you at the meeting , ’ said Jeremy . |
30 | ‘ I 'll see you at the château tonight for dinner . ’ |