Example sentences of "[noun] [vb past] [pers pn] at [art] " in BNC.

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1 Mr Trelawney met us at the cave .
2 Ken met me at the entrance and guided me into a side room .
3 One of the lads asked me at a dance how I had earned my living before I had got married .
4 David played it at a soundcheck and when I asked him if it was about Shaun he just smiled and then denied it .
5 Not that the organs of perception apprehended it at the time .
6 When we moved from Freiberg , Rebecca followed us at a distance .
7 ‘ HA HA HA HA HA HA , ’ the little girl went in the next picture-square , and ‘ BONK read the bubble as the typewriter hit her at the end of the joke .
8 Branson bought them at an auction which inflated the group 's price far beyond its true value .
9 In the 1470s the closest parallel is to be found in the north midlands , where Hastings ' possession of the key duchy of Lancaster offices put him at the head of the royal connection in the region .
10 In the 1470s the closest parallel is to be found in the north midlands , where Hastings ' possession of the key duchy of Lancaster offices put him at the head of the royal connection in the region .
11 Headmistress Shirley Cunningham greeted us at the school gates with her own highly appropriate joke .
12 Headmistress Shirley Cunningham greeted us at the school gates with her own highly appropriate joke .
13 But dear oh dear , headmistress Shirley Cunningham greeted us at the school gates with the world 's oldest joke .
14 Wood ladders greeted us at the most difficult places across the stream .
15 Theories of personal development , or of the historical and sociological development of humanity , which ignore it or dispense with it , make psychoanalytic theory less advanced than it was when Freud left it at the end of his life .
16 Corbett left them at The Bull , its narrow windows draped with black crepe in mourning for the landlord whose coffin now stood outside the main door , perched rather crazily on its wooden trestles .
17 Fear gripped her at the demoniacal glint in his dark eyes .
18 Lillee met him at the gate and escorted him to the middle .
19 The next tunnel forked , turned left , turned right again , and other tunnels led off from it ; and Fand led them at an even pace along a course that seemed to have no sense .
20 Although the other judges would not look at the assessors ' lists , Burn met them at the hall and compared his list of preferences to theirs .
21 Jane met him at the front door .
22 Sheffield went ahead after 30 minutes when Gage knocked the ball past Allen as he burst into the goalmouth and , though Walker parried both his shot and Deane 's follow-up , Deane beat him at the third attempt .
23 The boy found me at the sweet shop across the street , and told me of the drama .
24 The coach dropped me at the Lofleiđ3ir , a palatial hotel .
25 Cambridge also contained a strong ‘ republican ’ group at this time , and while there is no proof that Wordsworth joined them at the University we find that he freely associated with ex-Cambridge liberals after his return from France in 1793 .
26 For a while Flavia Sherman joined them at the rail and stood with her hand resting on Joseph 's shoulder ; but she seemed restless and soon tired of watching the peasants at work in the fields .
27 A ragged laugh escaped him at the startled look in her eyes .
28 ‘ It was a brutal and cowardly attack on wretched creatures whose offences placed them at the bottom of the prison heap , ’ he said .
29 They were part of Japan until Russia occupied them at the end of the second world war , and the Japanese feel they are justified in wanting them back .
30 97 Squadron of Lancasters left us at the end of April to return to Coningsby in Lincolnshire , from whence they had come , and with the loss of life drastically cut down , some of the pressure and sadness lifted , to be replaced by pressure of a different kind .
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