Example sentences of "[pers pn] [to-vb] at [art] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 They invited them to sit at a table and were joined by an unusually tall , thin man who was extraordinarily blonde for his age which was thirty to thirtyfive .
2 Like a host in some cheerful tavern , he told them to tether their horses and ushered them in , asking them to sit at the table and wait while he finished his business in his own secret chamber .
3 The professor 's secretary , who is wearing fluffy aquamarine slippers , asks me to wait at the end of a blank corridor .
4 Much of the writing about television fiction seems to me to remain at the level of elementary genres , grounded in the dominance of the semantic aspect , with relatively little analytic or historical attention to the ‘ verbal ’ ( style , mise-en-scene ) or the ‘ syntactic ’ ( narrative structure ) : there is very little close textual analysis of television fiction , and there is no scholarly history of the development of television form to compare with the histories which have emerged of early cinema .
5 Yes there were criticism but it 's not appropriate for me to comment at the moment .
6 ‘ He 's asked me to dine at the villa he 's looking after for a few months , just to oblige a couple of ex-pats .
7 PC Chris Eden said : ‘ It 's amazing how drivers ’ attitudes change when we ask them to look at the recording .
8 The allegation of the defence had to be met and properly dealt with , so the matter would be returned to the justices for them to look at the circumstances and come to a proper determination after they had heard further evidence .
9 Instead she pointed out what she thought was happening in the session and the need for all of them to look at the problems in a constructive way .
10 A notice apologising for keeping visitors waiting and inviting them to look at the booklets adds the finishing touch .
11 He likes me to smile at the camera , so twice I pulled shocking faces .
12 He wanted me to look at the provision by the business of work experience for secondary school students during the compulsory stage of their education .
13 ‘ Walked on the race course before breakfast the air balmy and very delightful , great numbers of the blue mountain parrots were making their morning meal on a large kind of the Eucalypti — two of the beautiful Nankeen night herons passed over our heads and we heard the curious note of the coul [ cowl ] bird or bald-headed friar — returned with an excellent appetite — drew all day — in the evening John called me to look at the skin of a snake more than six feet long which James shot in the act of ascending a tree — also brought me some beautiful specimens of a climbing plant bearing thick clusters of cream colour blossoms . ’
14 Merymose asked me to look at the body . ’
15 ‘ There 's a very special person I want you to meet at the concert tomorrow .
16 The Super Nintendo Scope light guns — which enables you to shoot at the television set with pinpoint accuracy — wo n't be in the shops until the end of next month .
17 I want you to look at a cow now .
18 Is the on the C V T , but again it 's , it 's easier to look at something when we 're talking about this , so I 'm going to ask you to look at the Covermaster rate book , which does n't have page numbers , but I want you to find the allocation to units table which is about four or five pages in .
19 The evening will enable you to look at the paintings and sculptures in an atmosphere of unhurried calm : quite a contrast to the frantic activity that precedes the show , as veteran exhibitor Fred Dubery explains
20 Now the next , I want you to look at the verse prologue of the play .
21 It all available for you to buy at the end of the day .
22 ‘ There 's a letter asking you to play at an out-of-doors arts festival in the desert somewhere .
23 ‘ No you 're not , there 's far too much for you to do at the farm . ’
24 Erm , the next bit of , that I want you to find which is the address and telephone section , that also , I 'd like you to put at the front of the active binder .
25 ‘ Dave , I want you to stay at the office .
26 ‘ I told you to stay at the house . ’
27 It is difficult for you to foresee at the beginning of your programme just how you will feel , what things will happen , which goals might prove harder than anticipated .
28 ‘ I want you to begin at the beginning and tell me your life .
29 Because they believed and they got me to believe at the time , that nationalization would be the cure for all our ills .
30 The British people will hold them to account at the election .
  Next page