Example sentences of "[adv] [pers pn] [vb past] at the " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
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1 | Luckily I lived at the higher end of the village so my house was not affected . |
2 | Naturally I jumped at the chance . ’ |
3 | ‘ It was worth doing , or so I thought at the time . |
4 | As I say , I could have destroyed you , or so I thought at the time , but you 've turned out to be a lot tougher than I had imagined … not vulnerable or confused at all . |
5 | She was a real beauty , or so I thought at the time . |
6 | So I waited at the ‘ phone and Jean-Luc Ponty rang me , and two days later I auditioned at his house . |
7 | So I looked at the two men again . |
8 | Mark Higgins is just 10 and said : ‘ I saw boxing on the TV and loved it so I started at the gym twice a week . |
9 | So I stayed at the hostel for four weeks . |
10 | For too long she gazed at the rain across the lake . |
11 | She did n't know how long she sat at the table , letting her coffee go cold . |
12 | So you jumped at the chance , but it is , I think th th poverty wage in Europe is it not , not about a hundred and forty , a hundred and forty five pounds ? |
13 | I stayed like that for the minute or so we waited at the Lochgair station platform , and did n't stir again — yawning convincingly for any other passengers who might be watching — until we were crossing the viaduct at Succothmore . |
14 | We were disappointed when Sheffield Wednesday turned down our bid for David Hirst so we looked at the situation again and decided that Cantona was the best . |
15 | I had found myself staggering from one situation to the next … we decided then that I was doing the same thing wrong you see , and so we looked at the actual practice … |
16 | Lastly we looked at the way in which the form of words is affected by the sender 's knowledge and idea of the receiver 's knowledge . |
17 | Together we shouted at the man , and told him we would tell this story all over London so that his name would be hated . |
18 | Together they gazed at the family portraits and Miss Hatherby pointed out the niceties of her forefathers ' dress — ‘ Folk would literally kill for shoe buckles of that quality . |
19 | Suddenly it rushed at the tree , leapt onto a low branch , and ran up the trunk . |
20 | Hardly a candidate for success you might think but you would be wrong to the tune of £120m because that 's how much it took at the US box-office . |
21 | No matter how much he wiped at the condensation on the window , he could still barely see what was going on out there . |
22 | It was a crazy idea , but it was all he had at the moment . |
23 | With this as the acquired recording , it was exceedingly difficult — or so it seemed at the time — to slip down from the stress-filled beta-waves of everyday living , to those desired alpha-waves of mental quiet and healing . |
24 | Or so it seemed at the time . |
25 | So it appeared at the public hearings . |
26 | Soon I arrived at the lime-kiln , which was still burning , although the workmen had all gone home . |
27 | ‘ You approached Miss Needham , repeated Markby evenly , ‘ whether or not you knew at the time that was her name , and you asked her to sign . |
28 | Above we looked at the affairs of only a single day ; and supposed the stocks offered for sale to be already in existence . |
29 | Tonight we camped at the site where the first Smith and Miranda expedition ended . |
30 | ‘ Whether or not they objected at the time of the planning application we ca n't say . ’ |