Example sentences of "he [vb past] at a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Kuypers was the first to use this technique in studies of the brain and over the next 10 years , now in the United States , he charted at a new level of detail the connections made by the cerebral cortex with nervous elements in the brain-stem and spinal cord that control movement in a number of higher mammals .
2 About to leave the room with the intention of driving immediately away , he checked at a slight sound by the open door to the outside and looked around .
3 True to form , he attacked at an unexpected moment .
4 Richard Roberts seized the opportunity to contract with landowners for the purchase of their wood and furze crop , which he sold at a handsome profit to the tinners .
5 After dark he stopped at a Little Chef , had a quick meal of scrambled eggs and coffee , then continued his journey .
6 He stopped at a little roadside inn and found inside an old woman at work with a spinning wheel , like ‘ a dark silhouette out of a fairy tale ’ , and beyond her , through the window , the clear sky and a path through the delicate green , and geese pecking in the grass .
7 Driving back from a game with fellow coloureds , he stopped at a white sports ground to watch a match played by members of the SACU .
8 ‘ Where 's Raimundo ? ’ he shouted at a wincing Umberto .
9 Eleven years later the World Federation of the Deaf at the seventh Congress in Washington awarded him an International Solidarity Merit Award , and Gallaudet College , taking advantage of his presence made him the first recipient of a medallion for " outstanding international service to the deaf " , which he received at a special convention attended by the Vice-President of the United States .
10 He officiated at an official weigh-in which launched biscuit backstamper Pat Bennett 's slimathon to shed three stones before the August Potters ' Holiday .
11 ‘ Any messages ? ’ he barked at a subdued-looking Leif , still sitting in his favourite place in the inglenook of the great fireplace .
12 Once in the street he walked at a gentle pace .
13 He grinned at a secret joke .
14 For two years he taught at a preparatory school in Reigate , before being appointed head of the English department at Stowe by the school 's headmaster , J. F. Roxburgh [ q.v . ] .
15 He taught at an inner London secondary school for four years but knew his future lay in acting .
16 He sniffed at a half-empty carton of goat 's milk yoghurt .
17 He never visited the local pub ; he shopped at an anonymous supermarket in the county town ; he kept his house startlingly neat , but never invited anyone there .
18 He has no heroes , except perhaps Kemal Ataturk , the stern maker of modern , secular Turkey , whose discoloured photograph he saw at a Turkish border post .
19 The pose had thrust his hips sideways as he leant at a slight angle and his free hand was at the level of his pelvis , thumb hooked into the waistband of his jeans , fingers doubled into a loose fist at the top of his hard , powerful thigh .
20 When his mind came round to considering this embarrassing enslavement of his macho male self to a mere animal , he felt at a complete loss to understand it .
21 Though Kenya 's Martin Suji , who is on a development tour , took only one wicket , he bowled at a lively pace , and the 21-year-old is likely to face the Scots in next year 's Associate Members Cup in his own country , if Scotland are accepted into the competition .
22 Even the New Forest Hunt master admitted it was wrong when he spoke at a rival press conference .
23 INACCURATE reporting by the media — particularly newspapers — was condemned by Bob McInnes , Branch Banking Division 's Deputy Managing Director , when he spoke at an informal dinner in North Queensferry , Fife .
24 ‘ We know that as an issue animal welfare is being widely discussed in the UK , ’ he said at a Danish Bacon and Meat Council ( DBMC ) trade event .
25 ‘ But I think it is a pointless exercise , ’ said Floy , somewhere towards morning , a thin , cold light filtering in through the windows to where he sat at a great desk , his black hair tumbled , hollows in his cheeks , his face white with fatigue .
26 He sat at a makeshift desk of unfinished lumber , and wrote and played with his thinning hair .
27 He sat at a large desk covered with papers , journals , medical books , a portable typewriter pushed to one end .
28 In 1986 , he destroyed at a single stroke the stranglehold of the unions over the British newspaper industry by removing his operation overnight to non-union Wapping .
29 He picked at a home-made roll and popped a piece of it into his mouth .
30 The 16-year-old , who can not be named for legal reasons , was granted bail at Sunderland , Tyne and Wear , on condition he stayed at a residential school run by the local authority until his next court appearance on October 7 .
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