Example sentences of "[verb] at [pron] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | Diamond Head was leaping at me from the right . |
2 | The dancers , from what Lucy had seen , were all pretty good in their way ; she 'd even begun to develop a liking for Maurice , who 'd winked at her in the corridor earlier . |
3 | Your only chance is to pull at him from the side , which may steer him away from the refuge he seeks . |
4 | Ma peered at him over the top of the evening paper , Her eyes were shifty with guilt . |
5 | Then she peered at him over the barrier of her firmly folded arms and expressed a thought that had occurred to her before , but that now she felt impress itself on her even more strongly . |
6 | She peered at him through the semi-darkness . |
7 | I peered at them round the end of the house . |
8 | Liz , the receptionist , peered at me over the top of her pink-rimmed spectacles . |
9 | When I peered at myself in the mirror I screamed . |
10 | Rod Porter peered at her over the top of his book , glancing at the other visitors . |
11 | Bella peered at her through the dark . |
12 | He drinks from his can and looks at me over the top of it . |
13 | He looks at me through the mirror and nods slightly , which I take to mean he 'd like my help . |
14 | He looks at me for the first time . |
15 | In any case , it 's weird that whenever I say that to Keith , he looks at me with the unmistakably quizzical air of the tall thin intellectual he is , his hair on the blond side of chestnut ( now heavily greying ) ; his fair skin with his rosy cheeks reminding one of Victorian youths with perfect complexions ( or so the novels of Wilkie Collins and the paintings of the Pre-Raphaelites would have us believe ) ; his eyebrows bushy and deliberately unkempt ; his classic tweed suit of the old school , worn with a shamefully Byronic air somewhere between hippy and academic ; his accent public school , as befits his education , although he also speaks a passable Spanish , so we can keep switching languages whenever linguistic difficulties develop . |
16 | Well wha what he does is is he looks at himself in the mirror something like that and er he sees sees the body he 's jumped into . |
17 | However , the individualistic approach of modern Darwinism which looks at it from the point of view of the reproductive success of individual genes , is n't like the older group selectionistic thinking was , prejudiced in favour of any group . |
18 | She smoothes the dress out against her front and looks at it in the mirror . |
19 | ‘ It 's got to the point where he looks at you in the morning as if he 's wondering where we are going to send him next . |
20 | Somebody looks at you in the wrong way some morning , you know , what 's the matter with you , that type of thing you know . |
21 | Then , gradually , her ideas would come together until , sitting on a stretch of grass and stabbing at it with the end of her parasol , she would repeat to herself , ‘ Oh God , why did I get married ? ’ ’ |
22 | ‘ Have you looked at yourself in the mirror lately ? ’ |
23 | Well the new one was the new one was we looked at one in the gas |
24 | I might have looked at her outside the church and seen just another assembly-line bride . |
25 | And the way she 'd looked at her on the doorstep , and the cup of tea she 'd spilled and blamed on her age . |
26 | So I 've looked at it at the end of day and thought well my God ! |
27 | Sixty-eight per cent of the population have read or looked at it in the past year . |
28 | Of course I have looked at it in the past , many , many times . |
29 | Er , so , there is undoubtedly a lot of work still to be done in making the D S O competitive , as for building maintenance work , I 'm not certain we 've ever considered having a building maintenance D S O. We may have looked at it in the days before D S Os , but that 's er , a long time ago , and it 's certainly worth having a look . |
30 | From time to time Maggie saw Felipe glance at them through the rear-view mirror . |