Example sentences of "[vb pp] [prep] at [noun] " in BNC.

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1 What have I been criticized for at work ?
2 Right so that 's looked for at birth , what 's the other thing they check for at birth ?
3 She was being looked after at home by her children and there was a great deal of anxiety being expressed by all the carers involved as to what would happen to the children .
4 I want to see elderly people looked after well and if they can be looked after at home all well and good but of course they need the facilities .
5 The maxim of hygiene in the garden is rigidly adhered to at Snowshill .
6 Natural populations of white clover are polymorphic for incompatibility alleles and for the ability to form nitrogen fixing symbioses with strains of Rhizobium but these have not been looked at at Henfaes .
7 ‘ But if we are not able to obtain all the slots we 've applied for at Heathrow we may have to consider cutting back , ’ he said .
8 Her ceramics are sought after at craft fairs in Northallerton , Harrogate and York .
9 He still ca n't draw any correlation between this project and the BIPS-1 work being done out at DEC 's Western Research Lab ( UX No 394 ) .
10 The room was a big improvement on the rat-hole he had crawled into at Hoogeveen .
11 By some instinct I told them … about the lost and degraded womanhood of England , the hosts of young girls slain in body and soul … met with at night in our terrible streets .
12 It was only after the women had left that she thought to check the receipt book to make sure it had not been her duty to collect payment for today 's four lunches , then sighed with relief when she saw that this had been attended to at lunchtime by Jean .
13 Injuries , pulls and strains can be swiftly attended to at Feethams where Nigel can perform a speedy diagnosis to decide how serious the problem is .
14 Most evening activity starts in the American style caf é/bar; that has been built down at street level .
15 That 's all they 've talked about at work , you know . ’
16 These can be treated lyrically and , as in the old ‘ arias ’ , dwelt on at length , even repeated to create bigger musical canvases .
17 The need for Russian assistance in the war against Japan , agreed to at Yalta , was now irrelevant ; for , as Truman casually informed Stalin , the Americans had successfully tested " a new weapon of unusual destructive force " .
18 Everton 's Peter Beardsley made a less optimistic assessment : ‘ When we get players injured there 's nothing like the depth of talent in reserve here that I was used to at Liverpool .
19 I know it sounds stupid , but I was trying to do all my sessions at the same speed I was used to at home .
20 Linen ( where provided ) is not always as large as we are used to at home and towels in particular can be fairly small .
21 Well , it 's not what we 're used to at Hoggatt 's , senior staff knocking each other about .
22 Another XR3 was broken into at Bramswood Road , Great Baddow , and a radio/cassette player was taken .
23 The President of the National Deaf Club , A.J. Wilson , donated the first national trophies to be played for at golf and at billiards .
24 This must go up on the wall ! ’ and stick his latest painting up with Sellotape alongside the daubs by the mentally handicapped group she had played for at Christmas , and the postcards from her friends all over the world .
25 It was a hundred years of Open Championships since the Belt was played for at Prestwick .
26 Many of them will want to be cared for at home .
27 It is in the interests of the local services that elderly people should be cared for at home , so the professionals concerned should be asked to give home carers all the help to which they are entitled .
28 is it easier for you to be cared for at home or in hospital ?
29 If only one in 10 of those people cared for at home had instead to be looked after in residential institutions the additional public cost would exceed £1 billion a year .
30 This measure was important , first , because it was the first extension from the field of schooling into that of welfare of the principle that a publicly-financed benefit could be granted to those in need , free both of charge and of the disabilities associated with the Poor Law ; second , it was a step towards recognition that parents were not necessarily culpable for the undernourishment of their children and that , with public support , needy children could be well cared for at home and did not require withdrawal into public or voluntary care .
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