Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] at [art] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 I mean this is something that we could maybe be of help to in fact maybe something that I could be of help to them on because I actually do lectures on public relations how to assess what I mean at a very basic level you want to communicate with press how do you do it but before you do it why do you want to do it .
2 Whether the particular scheme summarized here can contribute substantially to that end remains to be seen , but I hope at the very least I have been able to express why I believe that the social sciences will eventually be fused with biology .
3 And then , I knocked at the very weak leg .
4 Daphne flitted from party to party while I walked at a slightly faster pace from lecture hall to lecture hall , our two paths rarely crossing .
5 We paused on the small bridge which led to the ticket office , I looked at the now derelict railway cottages which stood silent , lost and forlorn .
6 He played as I suppose Bach himself would have played — I think at a rather slower tempo than most modern pianists and harpsichordists , though with no loss of rhythm or shape .
7 Well , I think at the very least the Society
8 I think at the very least my mother should receive a public apology .
9 Robin Prince of Sherwood should I say at the tonight .
10 Erm well they 're colleagues of mine , I work at the so these are colleagues of mine who are coming around
11 Coping strategies are unthinkingly deployed which tend at the least to be ineffective , and which often produce unintended , unwanted side-effects that breach the same or other injunctions .
12 When these values are adjusted to the 1 bar altitude , which lies at a fairly small distance below the cloud tops ( Figure 9.5 ) , then the equatorial radius is 71 400 km and the polar radius is 66 550 km .
13 At one remove from decentralization is the Athenian model of action which lies at the least controlled end of the continuum .
14 This experience , which spread at an unusually fast pace in our period , especially among manual workers , required adjustment on the part of individuals and society .
15 Similar quotations were to be found in all the other Christmas and New Year music rags , all of which hinted at an unusually relaxed atmosphere within the band .
16 It is this kind of objective correspondence which makes it possible for the experience of racism to become connected to paranoid structures of feeling and phantasy which originate at a quite different and more unconscious level of representation .
17 She bridled at the coolly assessing tone of his voice .
18 She gestured at the richly appointed room .
19 If you look at the very slow times , I think you 'll find it was pretty dead old ground . ’
20 As Lisa popped a breast of chicken into the microwave she glanced at the brightly coloured childish drawings secured by fruit-shaped magnets to the fridge door and her heart turned over with maternal pride .
21 The informal petty bourgeoisie is a term that is rarely found in attempts to outline class structure in Latin America , but Portes ' usage refers to small-scale entrepreneurs , who have similar characteristics in the class analysis to the dominant class , but who operate at a very different level and have a somewhat precarious existence .
22 You improved at a very disturbing rate , cariad ! ’
23 She cringed at the too cheerful sound of her voice .
24 This will be disappointing for a reader who expects at the least some evaluation of the shows .
25 More than physical possession , in which , Proust says , one actually possesses nothing , Marcel seeks from Albertine reassurance concerning his own distinctiveness , his separateness , his individuality , and in Proust 's conception of love , therefore , failure is inevitable , because despite the conventionally unifying language of love , what we seek at the most profound level is not contact with another person , but contact with ourselves .
26 In the afternoon we arrived at the truly beautiful island of Mayero which has no boutiques or roads and only a few hundred inhabitants .
27 To do this we look at the very small differences in energy levels of electrons in the atom that these nuclear properties produce .
28 And when you look far into space , you 're also looking back in time and we 're looking back when we look at the very most distant objects .
29 Here we look at the more important names .
30 There are normally two volumes on display in the Long Room , one opened at a completely illuminated page and the other showing pages of text .
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