Example sentences of "[verb] done at [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 You know I mean it 's so annoying and I wish now I 'd done at the time , wrote their names down .
2 For example , when we complained about our laundry not getting done at the hotel , and about our rooms not being done , it was Sun who went to the hotel and sorted things out .
3 There are recognized ways of doing things that ensure that the job gets done at a time when we are probably incapable of thinking things through carefully .
4 ‘ I suppose they might have done at the beginning , ’ he said , ‘ but by the time I can remember we had become part of the place really .
5 When they are grafted to a foreign site , they continue to develop as they would have done at the site of origin .
6 There 's paperwork I have to get done at the store before tomorrow . ’
7 With a shock it was brought home to Annie Oaks that they were the only family Lydia and Tobias had ever known , coming to Aumery Park Farm from the Union House as they had done at the ages of ten and twelve .
8 He confessed to Beaton all that he had done at the behest of the English king , including ‘ the suppression of sundry abbeys and friaries ’ .
9 She had been standing on the bank above him with her booted feet apart , her hands jammed into the pockets of her tight-fitting breeches , and for a fleeting instant he looked at her appraisingly as he had done at the reception .
10 Following the work that I had done at the MU on the Circuit Board Fault Diagnostic Aid in connection with my MSc project , 2 members of the staff had gained experience of expert systems : the Chief Technician and a civilian who had assisted me during the project .
11 As Thorfinn had done at the start of his reign , in Fife .
12 It was about six miles , a fair way for children , but we delighted in the story of what my father had done at the age of six .
13 So Elizabeth told her everything that had happened today and after half an hour they decided to tell everyone what the they had done at the disco that night .
14 He took her arm as he had done at the house , his hand under her elbow , her weight against him , and she was powerless to alter the facts .
15 The name of John Gould soon became synonymous with the fantastic bower-bird , and gave a new ornithological slant to one of the popular songs of the day : ‘ Will you join in the evening and charm us as you ever have done at the piano ’ , asked Gould of Mrs Owen shortly after his return , ‘ …
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