Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] at [num] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The engine steams slowly in at one end .
2 I like to put a pale colour behind a darkish one to make the dark colour stand out more and a dark colour dropped in just at one point behind a light colour to make the paleness improve .
3 The pound is down slightly at one dollar , forty-nine but unchanged against the Mark at two marks , forty-four .
4 Her mouth did n't move so well at one side now , after that last turn .
5 Did you live down there at one time ?
6 So if you got more post in , or your productivity in the servicing sections is down , from two point seven it 's down actually at two point six is what we 're achieving , we 're marginally out .
7 That means that they were designed to be viewed right through at one sitting .
8 From somewhere outside at one point there came a distant rumble and chinking , like old milk bottles clashing together .
9 Furthermore , we are assuming that the absence of latent heat and a change in specific volume is true not only at one point but along a finite part of the ( p , T ) diagram .
10 Generally , when you wish to punctuate a piece of optional , additional information or an aside that you are embedding in the middle of a sentence — for example with commas , dashes or brackets — then whatever punctuation you use should be placed both before and after the added element to signal its boundaries , not just at one end or the other .
11 It is already out at 500 Sun sites , including Kodak , Andersen Consulting and Sun 's own Sunsoft Inc subsidiary for the Solaris development team .
12 That 's put them all off down at one time did n't they ?
13 He was given instructions to taxi to the holding point for runway 26 and subsequently took off normally at 1202 hrs .
14 Andrea Wallace , one of Britain 's top cross-country athletes and a mother of two , running in only her second marathon , believes that if she is still there at 20 miles , she has a chance of gaining a medal .
15 The production cycle of a monthly magazine I once edited was over five weeks for features , news fared slightly better at two weeks , and these represent the time taken to get the magazine to the printer , not onto the newsagents shelves .
16 A Home of Our Own will be screened later tonight at eight o clock on Channel Four 's Free for All .
17 I could however moan on about the likelihood of anyone ever wanting to listen to this collection straight through at one sitting , or that Miss Battle could have done rather more in the way of characterising each aria ( and her diction is also hardly crystal clear ) .
18 The pound is up slightly at one dollar , fifty-seven , and down at two marks , forty-eight .
19 I look up now at two seagulls ,
20 Seemed like animal farm up here at one time , did n't it ?
21 Everywhere I go like he follows me know what I mean , I 'm sitting up there at one stage and he , he 'd spend a day sort of curls , curls up and cuddles me .
22 There was a gentle pitch down to 145 kts followed by a nose-up to 125 before settling back again at 135 kts .
23 Even afterwards at Four Winds , where a marquee had been set up on the lawn , and the guests mingled , Merrill still saw the affair as a disjointed series of impressions .
24 I know times I get it , like maybe just at one side , if I 've been sitting in a hard seat
25 He was strong , crawled about for a short while and walked quite strongly at ten months .
26 Very unlikely if it is properly controlled in terms of deposition of materials on site then certainly at two miles I do n't believe there will be a problem .
27 But a bit too long at five hours . ’
28 That 's one of the reasons why I 'm , why I 'm also interested in er in Freud because I think Freud provides that , I happen to think that Freud 's studies of , of crowd group psychology actually explain that , although it takes time to you know , certainly not at five minutes to four , it takes time to explain , but I think there is an explanation there and I think you c y y you can claim that there are certain emotions to do with identification and idealization , th that our genes have a programmer which things like erm nationalistic erm , erm er kind of jingoism can exploit in a modern culture which in primal cultures would have primal cultures people identify with their , with their local kin and their local culture and that 's that might ultimately promote their reproductive success , but that in modern cultures , this identification occurs with erm on a completely different level and with lots of people will not merely because you need so many more people modern cultures you have much more erm much bigger groups and you just meet many more people that , than you were ever th there is some interesting research , research recently published for instance which shows erm organizations seem to have a critical size and that people are not really able to track more than about two hundred and fifty other people , in other words you can have face-to-face relationships with up to about two hundred and fifty others , but once it gets beyond two hundred and fifty it 's too much and you start forgetting somebody as if the brain was primed to an optimum group size and once you get above that you just ca n't keep .
29 He had no ambitions to play Hook and certainly not at four days ' notice .
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