Example sentences of "[noun pl] turn [adv] at the " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | The dog , after lapping a little water , went and sat down heavily beside him , eyes turned up at the portrait of itself thoughtfully , perhaps making a critical assessment of it . |
2 | About 30 journalists turned up at the Thai border village of Pong Nam Ron , about 200 miles east of Bangkok , yesterday morning , but were told by the local Thai military commander that he knew of no Vietnamese prisoners . |
3 | The marquis 's lips turned down at the corners . |
4 | A stream of visitors turned up at the camp . |
5 | Then on Wednesday , hearses from two funeral companies turned up at the morgue to claim the body . |
6 | Two riders turned in at the approach to the castle , the rest of the cavalcade swept onward through the gate , flung open to give them passage , and vanished in a flurry of spume and fine mud along the foregate . |
7 | Women with stiff-brimmed panama hats turned up at the side and pinned with giant rosettes . |
8 | Where the tracks turns right at the woods , walk ahead to the gap in the hedge where the path joins the Ridgeway ( 639 032 ) . |
9 | He wore a tight khaki shirt , buttoned at the neck , and threadbare army denims turned up at the bottom . |
10 | Only six out of the school 's 260 pupils turned up at the school , and four of them were later picked up by their parents and returned home . |
11 | That afternoon two more carcasses turned up at the northern end of Butterwick Low , and another two were reported from the Norfolk coast , close to Cromer . |
12 | About 20 travellers turned up at the court as one of their group , Gary Frost , 28 , father of a year-old daughter , was due to appear from custody . |
13 | ‘ One of the — the adults turns up at the shop every day , I think . |
14 | He was wearing a duffel coat , done up on the wrong toggles , with copies of evening papers turned back at the job columns sticking out of both pockets . |
15 | And although hundreds of young hopefuls turn up at the Storm offices in London each year most of Sarah 's ‘ finds ’ are chance encounters . |