Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] at [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 There were big baskets of flowers everywhere and waitresses were giving everyone sparkly drinks and asking them to sit at long tables in the dining room .
2 " He has never asked me to go at this time of night before , " she whispered .
3 I thought it particularly nice of them to write at such length , as I had mistakenly called Roy Griffiths Mister !
4 Everyone stands at one end of the pool , and when it is time to start I swim to the end of the pool and come back .
5 Everyone stands at one end of the room with their eggs in front of them on the floor .
6 She saw them glance at each other and exchange a conspiratorial arching of the eyebrows , compounded in Miller 's case by the faintest of nods .
7 For all her encouragement to them to come at any time to her house , Rose herself was wary of calling at Great Meadow .
8 ‘ I thought I might find them laughing at poor Daddy , ’ Rose said , allowing her own shock and fear to ease out in the nervous laughter , but Maggie 's face remained pale and serious .
9 Several times while I was at Magdalen he had me to dine at All Souls with its distinguished Fellows .
10 Everyone involved at this period put in time and effort far beyond what might have been predicted .
11 Everyone looks at each other , and somebody finally says : ‘ Floyd says you 'll drop dead in a year . ’
12 Everyone looks at each other with the blank expression reserved especially for when someone who is off their trolley comes into the near vicinity .
13 I gazed at this scene thinking that of all of the things I wanted when I was grown up , the one I wanted most was to play a harmonium .
14 structures , their possibilities I mean at one stage they would have been at a certain level had n't got a landlord their income but that 's within one particular moral economy , now the idea here is to break that down , you know , just get rid of the circle altogether .
15 I mean at one stage we go back a hundred years — back to Dalton he thought of his atoms as being fundamental entities that could never be broken up , whereas now we know that an atom is a very complicated structure and we can measure things about atoms , we can measure the distribution , we can where the electrons and so on are .
16 So when someone walks up with the intention of breaking in a light comes on , I mean at one time , it 's not the same now , but at one time when these lights with the detectors first came out , nobody actually knew whether they were switched on or not .
17 Not quite cos I mean at one time , when he was Christopher 's age god he was never free from cold was he ?
18 I mean even us we we 're going in and out intensive care having a fag , having a cup of coffee , walking in , we 're full of germs I mean at one time you used to have to have gloves you know , did n't you ?
19 I mean at one time it was the Times Literary Supplement or something with an Oxford box around it .
20 I mean we 've , I mean at that point you 've got that was the point where you 've got the massive United States aid coming in erm you , you 've got erm United States equipping China with all enormous fire power , sending tanks in etcetera , I mean this was the beginning of , of the realization of the United States that , that the communists were a threat and they did n't like it and they , they were putting massive ai aid erm and , and that there was all that United States war machine erm
21 I mean at that point I would either do that , you know er change it or that would have been it
22 I mean at that time say perhaps go in the pub the or the or the , I mean there used to be so many pubs round the er , the dock area then , I mean you take the , and erm then there used to be the erm there was all them pubs round the dock then , noth one or two more but I ca n't re oh the was another one .
23 Well we were n't anyway there was very few pe , I mean at this time of the year I suppose but there was one place and it said Sunday lunch , there was a sort of black board outside , Sunday lunch erm four pound was it four fifty it was four fifty was n't it ?
24 Well this is about , I mean at this point it 's about one o'clock in the morning .
25 Chairman you 've got to allow me because by the time I 've finished you wo n't be able to stop me , er , but I mean if there 's a lot of money floating about in this area then I think that er , some committee or other should be looking at the the refurbishment of the courts in Devizes which are a disgrace , and partly the fault of this council when th they were allowed to get into such a state , and I mean at some stage or other , something or else is gon na to have to happen to them and I would hope that the magistrates in their wisdom in some committee or other are , are deciding to take these courts back into use .
26 I crack at those kind of things .
27 I met at this time a number of adopted children , and realised that the problems we all faced were similar , whatever the child 's colour happened to be .
28 People like ex-British Airways captain Derek Ellis whom I met at Kerikeri airfield .
29 As I sit at this word processor , the chips of which may have been assembled by a young woman in the Philippines for a pittance a day and for such long hours that her eyes will be damaged in a tax haven created specially for foreign companies , I am acutely aware of the link between the health of the people of the Philippines and my life here in Britain .
30 When I passed at this point MacArthur said perhaps I would like to hear his summary as a soldier and as no businessman or textile expert .
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