Example sentences of "[modal v] [verb] [adv] at [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | You must stay on at Casa Sciorto , Caroline … ’ |
2 | One suggestion made at this time was that the strongest swimmers among the Jews should jump overboard at intervals , thus forcing the St Louis to stop and turn round . |
3 | By that stage , you should feel totally at home with your new diet and confident that you can maintain it as a lifestyle with ease in the place of your former diet . |
4 | I thought it odd at the time that he should feel so at home there . ’ |
5 | The older climbs often take steep cracks so gritstone aficionados should feel more at home . |
6 | Notwithstanding the importance of trying to reduce inflation , does the Minister agree that increasing unemployment — 8,000 more jobless people in the city of Liverpool alone since January this year — and the effect on the telecommunications industry of the recent GEC announcements mean that he should look especially at ECGD funding ? |
7 | Now in some respects what I think should happen , is we should , yeah we should not be negative about going on the course , but in terms of the financial implications I 'm very worried about that and I think there is a erm , there is some need for the client to say , that if he wants us to go on this course we 're happy to go on it , but that he should look seriously at financing and he plus it should have been in the tender document . |
8 | In the bustle of adapting to the new life of an MP at Westminster , it had occurred to me that I should look further at pensions . |
9 | In order to answer that we must look closely at Paisley 's relationships with other unionists . |
10 | When we look at the mysteries of life we must look also at phenomena that seem , on the face of it , to have little to do with the way that life works . |
11 | If you must walk alone at night keep a look out for potential ambush spots and cross the road to avoid them . |
12 | I am hoping to return through Malta via Bali and we should arrive back at Ayr on Tuesday . |
13 | Corporate managers ' discretion will be legitimated since their power will be severely limited by the requirement that all their decisions must aim simply at profit-maximization . |
14 | And they er er they said people getting on this train er it was on the eleven , platform eleven near to where we were make sure , they kept giving it out giving it out , you must get out at Leamington Spa if you want Banbury . |
15 | The debate has the style of a Westminster confrontation , and you get the strong impression that even the complete no-hopers must sneak off at home to lie in the bath to practise cries of ‘ shame ’ , ‘ hear , hear ’ and other parliamentary harrumphing . |
16 | The next time the hon. Gentleman is on the train for Newcastle he should get off at Darlington and I will arrange a guided tour of that project for him . |
17 | It 's got to the point where manager Lennie Lawrence must wake up at times wondering which big game is next . |
18 | It was a perpetual anxiety with me that I should turn up at school wearing a dress that had been sold to that same shop by one of my fellow-pupils . |
19 | Assignment is a relation in the technical sense , but as it is a unary relation , many readers may feel more at ease if we speak of it as a property ( the two ways of speaking are of course completely inter-convertible ) . |
20 | Colds settle in the nose which may stuff up at night with much sneezing and blows out mucus and often blood ; nosebleeds with every cold . |
21 | But you 'll feel more at home in your own kit , so bring it along . |
22 | You 'll feel more at home when I 've introduced you to the rest of the team , everyone except Niall anyway . ’ |
23 | The more cautious analytical corporate financier might feel more at home in an accountancy firm , but the wheeler-dealer type should opt for a bank . |
24 | First it 'll stop off at Brize Norton to pick up supplies for the Tornadoes operating the air exclusion zone . |
25 | ‘ I 'll call back at noon , ’ he said to the buttons on her breast pockets , and she led me to a changing room full of paper nighties before turning to greet the next chicken on the conveyor belt and rewinding the tape to : ‘ Hi there , welcome to Surgicentre . |
26 | ‘ I think he ran as well as he could in the circumstances and he 'll go again at Longchamp in two weeks . ’ |
27 | You tell me you 're scared he might come back at Brett ? |
28 | The sergeant — his pace blackened with boot polish — assured me , ‘ You 'll get through at Clones . ’ |
29 | We 'll , we 'll get down at Southwold |
30 | ‘ I 'll come again at noon , then we 'll have all settled . |