Example sentences of "[prep] [pron] [noun pl] at [art] " in BNC.

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1 Yes , won a prize for my tomatoes at the Woodstock Horticultural Show !
2 I think the Prince of Wales may have told Sir Thomas so , after he asked for my services at the banquet .
3 I mean I have to pay for my books at the end of the year but that 's all .
4 If she is staying in a comfortable hotel , has a caddie to look after her needs at the golf course and can travel on the packages arranged by the Tour 's travel operators , then she is more likely to be able to devote her full concentration on her golf .
5 They say that ‘ nothing happens to the bad ‘ uns ’ , but it seemed unbelievable that misfortune should strike Arthur yet again directly after his triumphs at the Horse of The Year Show .
6 Dr Stroud and Sir Ranulph are expected to give more details about their experiences at a London news conference today .
7 Universities will accept applications mostly from youngsters who have done well in their in-depth subject , so 16-year-olds will still have to make the decision about their careers at an age when many are not ready , and two years before most other Europeans .
8 Now Rhoda had stopped work she would go down to the newsagent on the corner for her cigarettes at the same time every morning , each day a little lighter on her feet .
9 Although the launch date for Windows NT is yet to be released , the system is in its final stages of development and was certainly put through its paces at the exhibition .
10 Laura glanced through her eyelashes at the thick dark hair curling over the edge of his collar , the relaxed set of his broad-shouldered figure as he continued to idly watch the passing scenery , while he talked so calmly and dismissively about a marriage which , it was quite clear , had never been of any major importance in his life .
11 Desire warmed her blood , tingling through her veins at the expression in the dark , lidded gaze .
12 At the bottom he moved quickly between the racks and tables until he was crouched between two mannequins , looking out through their skirts at the scene in front of the inn .
13 Nicandra shrank away — she was not at all courageous about horses , especially when they were fidgeting threateningly and blowing out through their noses at the same time .
14 A correction of this distorted male-oriented perspective involves going back to women themselves and looking through their eyes at the occupation of housewife .
15 MILITARY musicians put would-be bandsmen through their paces at a Darlington school yesterday .
16 Students being put through their paces at the Hair by Alan d and Morris School of Hairdressing .
17 DARLINGTON Scouts were put through their paces at the weekend .
18 Notice also that since the bank charges interest on advances but gets none for its balances at the Bank of England , its operations are now more profitable .
19 With a savings-related share option scheme ( s 186 , ICTA 1988 ) , the company grants its employees an option to subscribe for its shares at an amount not less than 80% of their market value at that time .
20 It is relatively negative about its chances at the client end of the market , blaming ‘ the Unix is complicated ’ stigma .
21 She fidgeted between her sheets at the thought of those photograph books , so stupefyingly dull , when Dora 's Dolls ' House , or a game of Happy Families might have cheered him up .
22 But at lunchtime on Thursday , England 's management were horrified to see that the cooked food provided for their players at the ground was already cold and in need of reheating .
23 The 1989 AMERG survey of architects , however , indicates that a substantial minority ( over 28 per cent ) felt that the demand for their services at the time was not being adequately met and nearly 40 per cent felt that the intake of students into architectural training was insufficient to meet future demands .
24 Comment from Morton Westlake centred on how jolly good the scones were , how you could get a jolly food tea at the Waldorf in London , and the astronomical prices which some had paid for their seats at the forthcoming Test match at Lord's. it was the Old Stager who brought them back to the match in hand .
25 All applicants for admission from outwith the United Kingdom or European Community , applicants who are temporarily resident in the UK or EC at the time of application and those who have within the past three years spent a period of employment or residence outwith the UK/EC are advised that they should be certain of their status for fee purposes before registering for their courses at the start of the academic year and be certain that they have the necessary funds to meet the appropriate fees , and for subsistence throughout the course of study .
26 Any unit may be equipped with barding for their steeds at a cost of +8 points per model .
27 Big business interests have been quietly buying up Latvia match tickets to ensure seats for their clients at the Republic game .
28 I made a number of valuable contacts , and was able to renew my acquaintance with seven graduates of the M.A. course at Lancaster ( four of them teachers at the CIEFL ) .
29 So was I. The expectant mother was sixteen years old and one of my students at the school in Barcelona where I was five months into my first teaching job .
30 I even got a job for one of my half-sisters at a place in Lunedale , but she did n't settle to the job like me and wanted to go home after a short while .
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