Example sentences of "[noun prp] [vb -s] at [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 It is to this image of the reformed soul and the nature of its experience that Hilton turns at greater length in Scale 2 .
2 Though Bede says at one point that Oswiu also made tributary the Scots ( of Dál Riata ) ( HE II , 5 ) , there is no direct evidence for this .
3 AIRLINE Captain Jak Frost flies at full throttle carrying vital organs and heart transplant teams all over Britain and Europe .
4 One advantage Bedfordshire has at this time was that packages such as SIR , EDFAX and COMMUNITEL were being piloted in the country and one librarian was involved in a Prestel project .
5 President , the whole economic af future of Tyneside stands at this minute in the balance .
6 Mark Eccles plays at full back , with Ian Dove and John Nicholson at centre , Paul Barkes in the back row , and Brian Baldwin continues his comeback at hooker .
7 Hussein hints at more freedom
8 Like Juvenal , Duncan realizes At this point enters Macbeth , the new Thane of Cawdor , a double irony that critics have long relished .
9 Paperback preview 1993 Sarah Broadbent looks at this year 's most promising titles — the giants , the high-flyers , the major titles and the ones to watch , the literary titles , fiction and non-fiction .
10 The poem ‘ Futility ’ by Wilfred Owen seems at first glance to be simple and relatively straightforward , but , as with many of Owen 's poems , it is well structured and very clever .
11 Newton seems at that time to have accepted a variant of the ethereal vortices that Descartes had set rotating around the Sun to carry the Earth and the planets in orbital motion .
12 ‘ Many things ’ , Gustave writes at this time , ‘ have been predicted to me : 1 ) that I 'll learn to dance ; 2 ) that I 'll marry .
13 Ben Nevis stands at one end of the greatest mountain range in the Highlands , buttressing a grand array of ten Munros with altitudes above or near 4000 feet and forming an unbroken high skyline for several miles .
14 Mary seems at first sight to have carried still further the process of reversion : ‘ numbers cause great confusion , ’ remarked Count Feria , Charles V 's ambassador .
15 James Chapman looks at safe diver deployment .
16 Family Finance : Drop in and take cash out Christine Stopp looks at instant settlement share dealing , the latest offer from the only building society with its own stockbroking arm
17 John Butcher says at this moment a man on bail for rape is on the run ine the Midlands .
18 ‘ You can not make peace with dictators , you have to destroy them , ’ Nelson asserts at one point for the benefit of inattentive members of the audience .
19 Bersani arrives at this position because he sees gay male sexuality as enacting insights into sexuality per se which heterosexual culture has to repress ruthlessly ( above , Chapter 17 ) .
20 FURY : Enraged Gail York screams at impassive Tjolle at yesterday 's stormy meeting of customers who lost their dream holidays
21 ACER AIMS AT VACATED MINICOMPUTER SPACE
22 ‘ I still find it incredible that I do this at all , ’ Fruitbat admits at one point .
23 There are many reasons for this , which Romaine discusses at some length .
24 Business Technology : Treating Aids with a trick gene Christine McGourty looks at long-term therapy that could prevent the HIV virus reproducing
25 Hughes looks at comprehensive assessment of elderly people and their carers .
26 Prof Neville Birdsall gives three talks on the Dead Sea Scrolls at Holy Trinity Church , Darlington , on February 16 , 23 and March 1 ( 7.10pm ) .
27 Alan Harper returns at right back , teenager Billy Kenny is brought into midfield , with Paul Rideout and Peter Beagrie recalled to the attack .
28 She then stayed with us , and got a taxi for me to Victoria , which was taking Hastings trains at that time .
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