Example sentences of "[verb] at [pron] [det] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 After all , you do n't invite the left in to gloat at your own failure .
2 ‘ But I think he was quite rational last night , ’ said Breeze , marvelling at her own coolness .
3 She 's so scared , she 'd jump at her own shadow . ’
4 Federman has explained this characteristic as ‘ imagination mocking what it pretends to be doing … imagination laughing at its own pretensions ’ ( Federman 1976a : 576 ) .
5 The morning after that first night they bathed together , laughing at their own bodies and the world .
6 He doubled up laughing at his own joke .
7 this joke is not about laughing at your own jokes
8 he 's suffering , it 's bad about laughing at your own jokes that , you do n't do that .
9 And he wonders at his own sanity when he hears of the wealth of some of his rivals .
10 ( This was a circumstance paralleled at his own funeral , when the friends and relations of the woman he 'd been living with for part of the week since the early 1960s stole the show from us , the pathetic huddle of the family of his middle years . )
11 ’ You know , ’ she said , ’ I can tell two things from the way everybody looks at me this morning .
12 and he 's he 's got such a a negative way of looking at himself and everybody else looks at him that way now .
13 ( Abberley looks at his own cardiograph for a time .
14 But , once again , Scotland had done their homework , though it has to be said that Monsieur Dume was a little different from the referee of Cardiff , presumably because referees also watch videos and wince at their own sins , not least of omission .
15 In 1875 Mann Crossman and Paulin opened its own purpose-built pale ale brewery in Burton-on-Trent , costing £77,000 , to beat brewers such as Bass and Allsopp at their own brew .
16 The proctologist hooted at his own wit before asking which of my father 's famous wives was my mother .
17 He was bound to provide at his own cost one riding forester and two walking foresters to keep his bailiwick , and to perform the military service of ‘ going in the army at the King 's cost wherever the King goes ’ .
18 The publican had looked at her several times as she offered little posies of limp flowers to customers for a penny a time .
19 Have you looked at him this morning ?
20 No I 've not looked at it that way .
21 ‘ She wanted to choose the family herself , ’ suggested Juliet , who had n't looked at it that way .
22 Continue walking at your own speed , pulling slightly on the leash in order to tighten the choke chain , accompanying this with the command ‘ heel ’ .
23 In England older men could get contract work for hedging and ditching , maintaining public spaces , or minor building repairs , which allowed them to work at their own pace .
24 She adopted an individually structured approach to teaching which allowed students to work at their own pace as and when they pleased .
25 There is no set length of time in which to achieve these either — each individual is allowed to work at their own pace , they are assessed when they are ready .
26 While contracts ( see under contract teaching ) can be used in full-class , teacher-centred situations , their full potential is realised when they are employed to break the " lock " step and free students to work at their own rates and in their own ways .
27 And space to work at his/her own level of interest ?
28 Noreen teaches HGV lorry driving at her own school in Halifax .
29 Mr Fractor shouted at him each lesson and gave him two lengths of the corridor nearly every week .
30 The heads , from top independent boys ' schools , want to reduce A-level failures by letting students study at their own pace .
  Next page