Example sentences of "we [verb] at the [noun] of " in BNC.

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1 We met at the end of the war , ’ Sharpe said as though that explained everything .
2 Er , obviously on a more serious note , er it was very disappointing that we had such a severe er downturn in profitability last year after several years of steadily rising profits , and so what I want to do this morning was tell you a little bit about what happened in the last part of the year , since we met at the time of the interim results presentation last September , tell you the actions that have been taken and give you a little bit of insight as to where we stand at the present time .
3 His words when we met at the start of the Championship kept coming back : ‘ Willie , I 'm going to win the Open for you this week .
4 Cos we lived at the top of the second hill , opposite erm Doctor s er house , the famous eye surgeon .
5 Well , we got at the back of th the erm , shop there 's we got this room and it 's got this walk-in freezer erm fridge , and
6 The best way , then , to deal with the complaint that psychological-cum-biological theories of the state are too vague is to attempt a combination between these theories and those we reviewed at the beginning of this chapter .
7 To the unwanted social and psychological fall-out produced by the earlier hiding strategies are now added various kinds of physical discomfort : the ‘ psychosomatic ’ conditions we reviewed at the start of this chapter .
8 Returning to the questions we posed at the outset of this enquiry , we would , therefore , have to conclude that anti-Semitism , despite its pivotal place in Hitler 's ‘ world view ’ , was of only secondary importance in cementing the bonds between Führer and people which provided the Third Reich with its popular legitimation and base of plebiscitary acclamation .
9 AS WE reported at the beginning of September , an increase in the fixed price agreed each year between Champagne 's growers and merchants seemed inevitable , putting further pressure on prices that are already affected by rising demand .
10 As we mentioned at the beginning of this chapter , aggregate demand is the total demand for all final goods and services in an economy over a period of time and consists of the sum of the demands of consumers , firms , the government and foreigners .
11 How do we know at the end of six months whether they are performing well or not .
12 We kept our tempers , as if patience was n't something we maintained at the expense of our fading energies .
13 but whether we want at the end of it to have another water seminar , looking instead of extraction side but what the water companies are doing with our rivers it might not be a bad idea as part of er producing a considered view later on in the year but I do n't , I do n't think we can hurry this as there 's a lot of lessons to be learnt and I I do n't think we should do the work in the Fire and Public Protection Committee erm in getting our erm eyes taken off the dealing with the actual problem at the moment , we want to look , step , step back and say well what what was the cause of all that , but I do support erm proposal that we should have it listed as er
14 In that short interval we managed to grab a couple of milk crates and a door that we found at the edge of a building site .
15 At 8.00 we stopped at the foot of the Cavales Ridge and roped up .
16 We stopped at the side of the road outside a small town for our lunch .
17 We must stop , as we stopped at the end of the story of the binding of Isaac , that other story about God bringing a bearer of his promises to the brink of death , and ask more about what has been going on .
18 Er and as would have been noted in the in our report to this general assembly on page four hundred and nine , we say at the end of er the paragraph in the middle of the the page in which we are referring to ACTS and its commissions , in this connection it should be noted that the church 's approach to the Roman Catholic bishops conference of Scotland on the question of intercommunion is under discussion in that conference and in the ACTS commission on unity faith and order .
19 This unruffled progression fits perfectly the sort of chain of correlations of consequences which we disentangled at the start of this chapter but it does not seem to offer the prospect of the decisive determination of a particular result .
20 As we stroll towards Shrewsbury Castle , we halt at the church of St Mary 's .
21 This would have been impossible unless we camped at the foot of Beinn Eibhinn , or had started from Loch Ossian at dawn , or were two gold medalist fell-runners .
22 Table 10.4 examines each of the sectors we identified at the beginning of the appendix .
23 By continuing to ask ‘ is it true ? ’ instead of analysing ‘ which truth ? ’ and ‘ whose truth ? ’ , antiracists often remain trapped within the paradox we identified at the beginning of this Introduction .
24 As we noted at the beginning of the chapter , white , middle-class churches in Britain have a poor ‘ track record ’ on relating to artisan , West Indian and Asian cultures .
25 As we noted at the beginning of this chapter , because there is no consensus either among or between the different sectors of the village population over the answers to these questions , any overall conclusion about ‘ loss of community ’ is impossible .
26 We noted at the start of this chapter that our study of school management was not intended to be comprehensive : our concern was the management of PNP rather than that of every aspect of a school 's professional work .
27 We arrived at the bottom of a rope ladder which seemed to rise to an enormous height up the ship 's side .
28 Navigating along dry forest roads we arrived at the base of Mount Robert .
29 ‘ Could we look at the night of the murder , last Thursday ? ’
30 Their belief is that we stand at the beginning of an age in which the microcomputer will truly become part of human culture .
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