Example sentences of "[pron] [noun sg] just [prep] the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 She always slings my card just at the wrong time .
2 I met and married my husband just at the point when I was beginning to apply for senior registrar posts .
3 I reckon I dropped my fare just before the Bank of England . ’
4 I went to Westminster one night in mid-March , and was waiting for my bus just outside the Abbey .
5 and she 's coming over to see my dad just for the day you know .
6 We 've come to do Merry Monk , an HVS at its left-hand end which requires us to traverse carefully along its base just above the slow-moving water , grasping strange iron spikes driven into the rock .
7 Across the square from the Colégio Church is the Museum of Sacred Art ( Museu de Arte Sacra ) , with its entrance just round the corner in Rua do Bispo .
8 The girl , who was reading English at Puddephat 's college — one of the first women students there , in fact — had been found dead in her room just before the end of the summer term .
9 Or rather , they opened an exact replica of the Royal home , whose original is still securely on its site just outside The Hague in the Netherlands .
10 She hit her head just below the brim of her riding hat .
11 Sir Alec Cairncross , himself a distinguished practitioner of the Keynesian policies of the 1950s and 1960s , ruefully recalled in 1981 that the standing of economists , which was at its peak just after the war , was now back ‘ at its pre-war low ’ .
12 Hopefully United could have found their form just at the right time .
13 When some boys at the school put excrement under the headmaster 's chair , he contrasted the culprits unfavourably with true school sportsmen : ‘ Last Friday I was feeling pretty low when I found out about this lot … but then I went to football on Saturday , there were several lads and teachers there , playing their hearts out or giving up their time just for the school , and then I thought , ‘ Perhaps , it 's not so bad after all . ’
14 The contrast well with slower moving goldfish and koi , and spend most of their time just under the water surface searching for any dried food or insects which may fall onto the water .
15 All she has to do to get to work is walk out of her kitchen to her office just across the hall .
16 He keeps his liquor just on the other side of the room , but catch him actually dishing it out himself .
17 McCourt said Royal Gait was cruising turning into the home straight , but began to lose his action just before the final flight .
18 He reappeared with his shotgun just at the moment Judas was handing over his master .
19 Then this one guy stopped and parked his car just across the road .
20 ‘ He 's got one or two things on his mind just at the moment . ’
21 She wanted me to phone a number in Zagreb to find out if her husband , who had gone to Yugoslavia for an operation on his liver just before the war , was alive or dead .
22 Manville hardly felt the entry of the .38 slug as it chewed into his body just below the bottom rib , burning upwards at an angle through his lung .
23 She stood up , drawing him with her , and for a moment he was upright , his feet on the slope , his head just above the rim .
24 He announced his departure just before the kick-off and so Scotland 's ramshackle team of liquorice allsorts went out to face the world champions Uruguay stripped of all confidence and tactical direction .
25 Had a parachute on his back just like the rest , and holding out the holy cross in his hand .
26 He was rubbing the top of his skull just at the hairline , but seemed otherwise unaffected .
27 ‘ You wrote that you caught him at his flat just at the time he was leaving the country . ’
28 Lachlan , racing out to set up an ambush for his nephew , insisted against his shipmaster 's warning on taking a corner just too neat , and stranded his birlinn just off the Rubha Aird Druimnich .
29 For the first time population could increase with a declining grain price and a less than commensurate food output , subsisting on grain imports paid for by manufactures ; ‘ It is one of the most striking ironies of intellectual history that Malthus should have fashioned his analysis just at the time when it was about to cease to be applicable to the country in which he lived ’ ( Wrigley 1986 ) .
30 He took his position just inside the gates of the park , cleared his throat , and , in a booming baritone voice that implied a spell at drama school , started things off by announcing , with practised shrug , that he was n't British at all , he was a Yank .
  Next page