Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb -s] [adv] at the " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | But that , it does n't say after the SAT , the written comment can be made er , where we send er D and I reports home at the moment , i.e. er , just after half term in the second term . |
2 | She winces visibly at the memory . |
3 | Back on the main road , it turns right at the junction in Gleann Beag , passing a complex of handsome farm buildings , and ascends a long incline where much-needed improvements have taken place . |
4 | Is it not true — as my hon. Friend the Member for Bradford , South ( Mr. Cryer ) pointed out — that as much public money goes to one CTC , to which parents who have not gone through the normal process will have access , as to all the other schools in the area , and that it goes there at the same rate ? |
5 | He kicks moodily at the carpet . |
6 | He looks longingly at the teapot and the tiny red cups . |
7 | When I ask our guide who lives there , he glances disapprovingly at the slums . |
8 | One per over per batsman is the ration , with a bouncer being defined as a ball passing over the batsman 's shoulder as he stands upright at the crease . |
9 | It looks closely at the range of policies developed by local government and in so doing assesses the relative responsibilities of various professional and political groups for their initiation and enactment . |
10 | It looks only at the side of business interests who think only of trade liberalization . |
11 | He shoots twice at the cashier , but misses both times . |
12 | Through sea-sized eyes that are crusted with rheum and asteroid dust He stares fixedly at the Destination . |
13 | He smiles slightly at the vague feeling of hope he now feels . |
14 | And he smiles afresh at the thought of what that particular victory meant to everyone who witnessed it . |
15 | He still has a still has a few technical problems with his speeches , his voice is very thin , he falls away at the end of sentences and when he rises to a crescendo his voice is like the distance whine of an aeroplane engine but what he said was exactly what they wanted to hear a return to family life and strong law and order . |
16 | But because it operates only at the level of ideas , without any attempt to specify why particular ideas are held in particular societies at particular times , other than by reference to other ideas , interactionist social psychology can only describe peoples ' beliefs , not explain them . |
17 | Alex Lightbody , the reigning Irish champion , will also do his cause a power of good if he does well at the British Isles Championship in Worthing . |
18 | It does well at the lower temperature , and will take some time to adapt to the temperatures above 70°F . |
19 | Tailoring the extent of regulation to the particular circumstances aims to give protection where it is necessary without interfering with the efficient operation of the market where it is not , but it does so at the expense of adding to the complexity of the regulations |
20 | As Westergaard and Resler say ( 1975 , p. 101 ) , ‘ sex inequality in pay reinforces class inequality : it strikes hardest at the lowest levels of the occupational hierarchy ’ . |
21 | This too is a technique pioneered by Neighbours , where it works best at the beginning and end of each episode , and in the poignant identification of the tragedy of Paul and Gail , who do and say the same things day after day , but wear different clothes . |
22 | It 's all the same stuff you know , we ca n't move forward unless it comes forward at the other end |
23 | ‘ If things are as you say , then a man can never be sure of his wife ; never be sure that he 'll find her there when he comes home at the end of the day . |