Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb base] [adv] at [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | You know , I mean even at these diet clubs , oh well , you know do n't stop going out just eat what you , but if you go out and you 're eating sweets for you know , after your dinner |
2 | I do intend to er to attend inaugural meetings with each of the C P O s er with a view to looking I mean obviously at some stages you said to me that I would probably have to attend at short notice |
3 | how I look just at this second or anything ! |
4 | If I get home at 12.30 I probably wo n't want to go down a club , but I 'll pull a beer out of the fridge , sit down and have a laugh at everybody else making pillocks of themselves , including the prat who calls him self the Hitman . |
5 | I have to admit that on a good day I find little at all wrong with the prospect of a ride in a new BMW , and Patterson was obviously well-pleased with his material rewards of Yuppiedom . |
6 | So thank you very much indeed , for coming , for addressing us , and we look forward I think both at national level and as you suggest , at local level with ever more valuable and productive relationships with the private sector , together with the other partners which , er , whom we need , and thank you for leading us along this |
7 | At least I think so at any rate . |
8 | I think maybe at first she should have a morning meeting , or a weekly meeting , to discuss the menus for the following week . |
9 | And we should look also I think perhaps at some quality factors er which might be written into the lease since there are some some things which I think we 're all less than satisfied with er you know customer complaints and the way they 're dealt with . |
10 | So I come there at this morning with cramp in my leg and I said I 've hardly had that , |
11 | I work hard at dull , practical things , she thought , and so everyone thinks I must be mature and reliable and sensible ; but really it 's because I ca n't cope with the other things , the things that are frightening and dangerous . |
12 | Are you aware that you eat differently at certain times of the month and perhaps even crave sweet food when your period arrives ? |
13 | ‘ Woe betide if you die before at least those first five years of service ! |
14 | And when you walk aerobically at 4 miles an hour , you will burn around five times more calories than you would being sedentary . |
15 | You look again at that power cable . |
16 | If you look closely at that to what depth to what depth do those senses reach in your church ? |
17 | If you look carefully at this level you 'll see two dark bands and in between the growth . |
18 | If you look carefully at this table , you will see that the combination of + and — values for each phoneme is different ; if two sounds were represented by exactly the same + 's and — 's , then by definition they could not be different phonemes . |
19 | ‘ Thought about your plans for when you get outside at all ? ’ he asked casually . |
20 | Now if you turn right at that junction |
21 | If you turn right at that junction , on which road do you go ? |
22 | And you leave here at twenty to eight at night a an and you arrive at , you arrive in Ayr in the morning about half past seven . |
23 | I expect you 're tired — you generally have a sherry and a nap when you come home at this time , and , besides , there are those papers to correct and I hoped you 'd help me unpack . |
24 | " I suggest that we meet here at nine and go along to Ingard House together . " |
25 | In other words , we look separately at old poor people , old rich people , young poor people and young rich people , and calculate in each of the four groups what proportion would be prepared to break the law . |
26 | Thus , although some of the topics are outside the main scope of this book , we look briefly at this matter in this section . |
27 | But if we look closely at two of the top galleries — d'Offay and Lisson — you can just see how women have been consistently overlooked by them . |
28 | And , indeed , if we look closely at any of the explanations which have been offered , we are forced to admit that we actually know very little beyond the bare statistics of attainment in public examinations or national surveys . |
29 | And I 'd also like to come back on this of closed schools in that if we look only at chronological age , which puts a limit on ‘ O ’ levels , we are shutting doors , because many students — and I see this in the sixth form — are not ready for these examinations at the prescribed age . |
30 | I do n't think we know enough at this point to make a judgment . ’ |