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

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1 Or scanned you at a maiden aunt 's ,
2 The man heard or sensed him at the last moment and turned with his hands coming up to a fighting stance but Maxim feinted through them and hit him low in the stomach .
3 Rather , she must have inherited it or bought it at a jumble sale for the sake of something to cover herself as a rest from her everlasting black or perhaps ( most likely ) found it in a drawer of her newly married bedroom , chosen for her by Uncle Philip as suitable for his wife to wear on Sundays .
4 The disorder that had seemed to him for decades to determine the course of events regrouped itself like a pile of iron filings suddenly organized by a magnet , and he had a flash of optimism when it appeared quite possible that men in the days to come might wish to find out more than concerned them at the moment .
5 Like someone in a trance , she gazed at the clasp that fastened it at the throat .
6 A sentiment that ambushed her at the coldest moments .
7 The scene that greeted her at the top was already less frightening than it had been when Phoebe arrived .
8 Then he took the stones from their pouch and laid them at the bottom of the Bowl .
9 There was not a needy person among them , for as many as were possessors of lands or houses sold them , and brought the proceeds of what was sold and laid it at the apostles ’ feet ; and distribution was made to each as any had need' ( Acts 4:32 , 34–5 ) .
10 When he got there , he pulled an enormous bell-mouthed gun — I imagine it was a blunder-buss — from his belt and levelled it at the monster .
11 I made contact with Sheringham through an agent and met him at a hotel .
12 We jumped out and met him at the rear of the vehicle and tried to show him a letter of introduction from the Algerian Ambassador to Britain , Lakhdar Brahimi .
13 In short , the consumer called the tune and the operators who prospered were those who best identified the needs of the consumers and met them at the right price .
14 A stout butler led Alexandra across a hall floored in gleaming yellow wood and lined with large dark paintings , and announced her at the drawing-room door .
15 Hawkins , a Devon merchant , had seen that the demand for slaves from Africa was increasing in South America , and in 1562 he sailed — in the way many Englishmen were to do in the seventeenth and eighteenth century — to West Africa , bought slaves , took them to the Caribbean ports , and sold them at a profit .
16 I rang Prentice as I could n't think how to put it off any longer , and got him at the second number he 'd left .
17 Deliberately , he lifted the photograph and flung it at the fireplace .
18 Alex attended a similar establishment for boys ten miles away and visited her at every weekend exeat .
19 She had drawn her fair hair high into an elaborate plait down the back of her head and fastened it at the bottom with a wide tortoiseshell clasp : it looked distinguished and competent , but nowhere near cuddly .
20 The Labour administration approved the scheme wholeheartedly in 1986 , and used it at a public inquiry to try to oppose the imposition of more A-road architecture on the site approved by the previous Tory administration .
21 I needed to come up with a solution which avoided this overly defined focal point and used it at the same time .
22 They followed Fiver up the run and overtook him at the entrance .
23 They were watching her intently , with a look that disconcerted her and excited her at the same time .
24 He took the kettle from its hook above the fire and filled it at the sink .
25 The tide had n't covered the pebbles yet , so I took up a handful and lobbed them at the bottle .
26 So I went on into the town , and told them at the castle , and the lord Beringar has set a guard on the place now until daylight .
27 She' took sandwiches and ate them at the school .
28 And finally two Ayr police officers said that a shelved 1969 report showed they had picked up a man ‘ of slight build and a Glasgow accent who said his name was McGuigan or McGuinness ’ some 600 yards from the Ross bungalow in the early hours of the morning of the murder and dropped him at the bus station ; and they now declared from photographs recently shown to them that the man was William McGuinness .
29 As Kopyion walked towards him , Carlson ordered him to stop , aimed his weapon and fired it at the general 's shoulder .
30 John found a torch and shone it at the engine cowling .
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