Example sentences of "[adv] at [pron] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | While ideally this should be the chairman there may be someone even better at it in the group . |
2 | So clearly now , the , there 's some merit in looking afresh at it in the light of five B , being able to match the kind of funding that 's available there . |
3 | He looked mischievously at her over the top of his paper . |
4 | There she is , in the other photograph , guileless and fervent , leaning forward across her desk , philosophizing away at me from the broad steppe of her Slavic soul . |
5 | He bashed away at it with the A.S.M. solidly from eleven fifteen , when he arrived at the theatre , until half past two , without any break for lunch or the drink he desperately craved . |
6 | In the early days of the band , before John arrived , he 'd beaver away at us in the pub , making us think through our attitudes We ’ d be sitting there talking about music and he 'd dive in . |
7 | She had brought herself a new swimsuit but after she had changed she 'd stared critically at herself in the mirror in the changing-room . |
8 | It was only a couple coming in from the terrace , and she was about to look away again when she caught sight of a tall , stooping man standing outside and peering lugubriously at her through the glass . |
9 | As we walked along the track from the car park on that sparkling May morning , swifts skimmed low over our heads after swarming gnats , dainty white lady 's smock swayed in the breeze , and a little owl stared solemnly and unblinkingly at us from the fork of an oak tree . |
10 | He arrived home at one in the morning . |
11 | But Slorne could only stare mutely at him in the cold moonlight . |
12 | ‘ Ooh la la , ’ said Nour , looking up to smile directly at me with the triumph of the creature who knows himself to be irresistible . |
13 | ‘ I 've never seen so many motorbikes at once before , ’ Maria confessed , staring disbelievingly at one in the lane alongside , two small children wedged between youthful-looking adults . |
14 | Madame Gebrec gazed earnestly at her across the table . |
15 | It must have been there all the time , sitting motionless and staring straight at me from the far edge of the level area of the Grounds , but I had n't noticed it at first . |
16 | The tanker driver , Derrick Worrell from Bath told the coroner he saw the car coming straight at him on the wrong side of the white line . |
17 | She 'd bent down to pick up the purchases at her feet , and as she rose again she 'd caught sight of a face she knew , looking straight at her through the moving mesh of people . |
18 | An ugly black dog barked harshly at her from the basement patio of the house next door . |
19 | She felt again the presence of the wife , looking kindly and securely at her from the photograph ; do n't resent me , said Helen , I am really neither here nor there , I very much doubt if I signify , you need n't mind . |
20 | Today , when Florrie arrived at the corner-shop and rapped on the closed front door , Aunt Emily lifted the roller-blind and peered shortsightedly at her through the glass . |
21 | The special difficulty is not how to choose between several alternative computational accounts , once we have got them , but how to arrive even at one in the first place . |
22 | Dragging two novices with buoyancy problems looking excitedly at everything on the bottom , must have taken some stamina . |
23 | As she looked across at him during the game to see him , chin propped on his hand , his whole face a mask of concentration , but paradoxically , at the same time , as relaxed and self-forgetful as she had ever known him , it was plain how handsome he must once have been . |
24 | He looked across at her through the frost and rose of dawn . |
25 | Brushing the damp hair from her brow , Laura stared drearily at herself in the mirror . |
26 | Bring the Colonel 's men there at one in the morning . ’ |
27 | He came forward at me through the smoke and he was n't smiling . |
28 | All the time those steady , golden eyes had fascinated her — and now they were looking steadily at her along the barrel of a gun . |
29 | ‘ Perhaps , ’ she answered , smiling freely at him for the first time that evening . |
30 | Alan dabbed hurriedly at him with the towel and picked him up . |