Example sentences of "[verb] [adv prt] [adv] at " in BNC.
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1 | He lived on quietly at Fen Ditton , where he was buried 9 December 1690 . |
2 | He expects me to carry on up at the manor as though it 's just another working day. ? |
3 | They were advised to carry on as at present with these and focus in the meantime on the priority problem behaviour . |
4 | By now , it was raining enough for the covers to go on over at Wimbledon . |
5 | He stood for a minute or so gazing down expressionlessly at the pale , bloodless face of the Prophet . |
6 | He never knew what these special things were and tried to find out by sneaking down there at night , but the shed door was always locked . |
7 | Theodora got in exactly at nine every day and punctiliously greeted whoever of the clergy were in at that hour . |
8 | But nor was Aldaniti , who had broken down again at Sandown Park in November 1979 and was to spend most of 1980 recuperating at his owner 's Sussex home . |
9 | A DEFEAT at the hands of old rivals Celtic never goes down well at Ibrox . |
10 | Sugar goes in too at this stage before the coffee is heated up . |
11 | ‘ But I do n't think either ourselves or Forest will be struggling down there at the end of the season . ’ |
12 | His only hope now , he believed , was a direct invasion of England from France and he moved on almost at once to Kinsale , where a French frigate was waiting to take him to Brest . |
13 | when the business of the partnership can be carried on only at a loss ; |
14 | They wandered on together at random . |
15 | I remember walking down there at night and I had a cough . |
16 | She peered out into the office , winding down now at the end of the first day : at the two constables scribbling notes at their desk , at another sitting at the HOLMES computer , at a WPC glancing through the actions book . |
17 | Yes , well fortunately this whole Gulf thing seems to have died down will be dying down just at the right time . |
18 | Max appeared disappointed by the reply as he peered down again at the grisly work on which he was engaged . |
19 | The windows of the five-storey buildings , with ornate wrought-iron balconies , peered down condescendingly at the passers-by , smug in their classic mantles of ivy and flowering creepers . |
20 | She 's got him booked in again at Cocaine Hall when she gets him back . ’ |
21 | He withdrew at once to a gracious distance , not to disturb in any way the privacy and composure of the next contender , and his two young squires , well trained to be equally unobtrusive in attendance , drew in silently at either shoulder . |
22 | The Hochhauser Season had come along just at the right time , a time when she needed a little excitement , a little glamour , a little of the old camaraderie that she had known with her friends in Vienna . |
23 | Okay , feel free to come down here at any time with this sheet and er going through the , the examples in greater detail Q M four FIT was the data file , you 'll always be able to access , right when you 've logged out of the network feel free to go and a merry Christmas , see you next year . |
24 | They 've agreed they 're gon na use this federation one as a short stop gap an an I think Paul 's point is spot on , it might be a bit silly to jump in just at the moment |
25 | And there she lies down discreetly at his feet , se not knowing what 's gon na happen . |
26 | I was let down lightly at the beginning , though . |
27 | Chapman had kept a close watch on Speirs ' feud with Bradford City , and moved in just at the right moment . |
28 | Grandparents who moved in only at the very end of their lives , just for a few last months , rarely left much of a mark unless earlier contact had been important . |
29 | As he slowed Grye she looked up and as quickly looked down again at her feet . |
30 | But his mind had clouded over again at the wrong moment and now it was too late . |