Example sentences of "it [adv] at the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Codron tried to get it on at the Royal Court — on the face of things , an ideal setting-but it was turned down there , too . |
2 | I 've got it I 've got it at home I can bring it in at the next meeting or whatever . |
3 | ‘ If you 'll wash the lettuce I 'll make my special dressing and we could pick some wild sorrel and chop it in at the last minute . ’ |
4 | Self-delusion could easily once again cloud the judgment of the shadow cabinet and Labour could go it alone at the next election , perhaps with the same misplaced confidence in a ‘ safety first ’ stance that will deliver success if the dangers inherent in new initiatives are avoided and new ideas anathemised . |
5 | Whisper it not at the British Heart Foundation , but we knew that , as well as the salt , into that dinner had gone a dozen eggs , a couple of pints of cream , half a pound of butter , a quarter-pound of sugar and about half a pint of Calvados . |
6 | But I have a feeling it might be easier to mull it over at the next meeting . |
7 | The phone on the wall close to her rang and she picked it up at the second ring . |
8 | He says well I , we were on about sort of and he says bring it up at the next meeting , I says |
9 | She picked it up at the third ring . |
10 | Yes yes if members had any complaints about their work I would report it up at the head office and up up at the the branch office in Park . |
11 | He opened it up at the last minute , came flying over and it was a terrific shot . |
12 | We agreed to set it up at the last meeting . |
13 | When they reached the prison , at Riom , and an official tried to argue that they had no authority to remove the canisters , Jacques Allier took out a pistol and levelled it wordlessly at the bureaucratic face . |
14 | Sabine pinned on a polite smile , and aimed it straight at the oncoming vehicle 's windscreen . |
15 | He said it straight at the senior officer , who looked for a moment as if someone had cracked a whip in his face . |
16 | Overall the computational complexity of the system rules it out at the present time for application to the recognition task . |
17 | Another affronted retort rose to her lips , but bewildered honesty forced Isabel to choke it back at the last moment . |
18 | Chesarynth gripped it convulsively at the strange sight of people milling around . |
19 | They have fired this interest by spending £44m on the issue , aiming it primarily at the retail investor when one might expect an issue of this sort to be more suitable for institutions . |
20 | I would have liked to have heard it again at the second service but Dad made us hurry home . |
21 | It still ran away from him but he grabbed it again at the second attempt before it went over the line and the chance had gone . |