Example sentences of "[be] at the [adj] end " in BNC.
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1 | Yeah , you 're at the right end ! |
2 | Casualty doctors who 're at the sharp end see the evidence that speeding is deadly . |
3 | It must be incredibly frustrating to have the weight of climbing opinion against you if you 're at the front end of the game and you want to climb a new line without considerable risk of topping yourself unless you place bolts . |
4 | Ah but that 's the devil to try and coordinate that with an orchestra when you 're at the other end |
5 | If you 're at the other end , you 're actually producing something , bear in mind your opening sentence , your opening paragraph , your headline , your title , must actually hook people in . |
6 | Squatters have long felt they 're at the receiving end of a bad press and have have welcomed tonight 's opportunity to express their side of the story . |
7 | You 're at the wrong end of the snake , you 're okay . |
8 | ( As suggested in Chapter 1 , ‘ larks ’ tend to be at the lower end of the range and ‘ owls ’ towards the top of it. ) • Where are the sense organs that pick up such external factors ? |
9 | However , the introduction of the new lower 20% tax band on the first 2,000 of taxable income in March 1992 should help improve the position of some 4 million people who are thought to be at the lowest end of the income scale . |
10 | When the trust is in demand , prices are likely to be at the upper end of the range and the trust is said to be on an ‘ offer ’ basis . |
11 | On January 22nd Alan Greenspan , chairman of the Federal Reserve , suggested that it would be at the low end of that range largely because much of the equipment being used would not be replaced . |
12 | The effect of these changes will be far-reaching and transport will , in many respects , be at the sharp end . |
13 | Ms Hargreaves , 32 , from Derbyshire , will be at the sharp end of the project . |
14 | Ms Hargreaves , 32 , from Derbyshire , will be at the sharp end of the project . |
15 | Somewhere people are drumming — it must be at the far end of the village , because at times the rhythm is distinct but when the wind takes it it becomes muffled , merging with the roar of the full monsoon river . |
16 | Therefore instead of walking all the way along the cliffs that morning , he decided to go down to the beach on the last lap of his journey , knowing that Edna and her small charge could well be at the far end , from whence he could quickly scramble up the pathway to the Tremayne property . |
17 | As she continued her searching look , trying to make out what might be at the far end , she became aware that she was gliding . |
18 | ‘ I ca n't picture it , ’ she said , ‘ but it could be at the far end from the flat . ’ |
19 | WHEN engineers working for the Tokyo gas company , get a telephone call in the middle of the night , the chances are that a computer will be at the other end . |
20 | ‘ Could be at the other end . |
21 | Among the many shocks being delivered by the declining years of the twentieth century is that of discovering , after decades of thinking we were the true moderns , how modern they could already be at the other end of the century . |
22 | but you 've got to find the place there it could be at the other end a mile away could n't it ? |
23 | It is artificially constrained in a way that ensures that the burden is not fairly distributed and those at the top end of the property range , and very likely to be at the top end of the income range , are being given shelter which is not justified . |
24 | The fortunate individuals who turn out to be at the top end of the income distribution usually own physical and financial capital as well as their own labour , or human capital . |
25 | Hopefully , I will be at the top end with Hartlepool . |
26 | because he would be at the top end of the other school |
27 | Lloyd 's needs to get a grip on more ‘ safe ’ business to offset its increasing tendency to be at the wrong end of big disasters such as Piper Alpha . |
28 | Lloyd 's needs to get a grip on more ‘ safe ’ business to offset its increasing tendency to be at the wrong end of big disasters such as Piper Alpha . |
29 | Both our customers and our prospects are feeling the squeeze , and we generally seem to be at the painful end of it . |
30 | Fully saturated colours , interestingly , tended to be at the red end of the spectrum for the six subjects involved in this study , and only rarely were saturated blues , purples or blue-greens reported . |