Example sentences of "[vb base] [pron] [verb] at [det] " in BNC.

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1 You 're beginning to sound like a mother hen ; I half expect you to cluck at any minute . ’
2 When you 've done that I want you to look at this .
3 And , although this huge deficit is in large measure a consequence of the fall in tax revenue and the cost of unemployment in the recession , the IFS expect it to remain at this level for some years even if a gradual recovery does take place .
4 And , although this huge deficit is in large measure a consequence of the fall in tax revenue and the cost of unemployment in the recession , the IFS expect it to stay at this level for some years even if a gradual recovery does take place .
5 Let me go at this another way .
6 Bruin many years later became the CO of No 84 Squadron in Greece — that is before we were all thrown out by the Germans and , let me say at this stage , aided and abetted by a rather unmentionable faction of Greek insurgence .
7 ‘ Hold still ; let me look at that . ’
8 ‘ If I so much as catch you smiling at another woman — ’
9 Kate deliberately let all control go , let her anger at this man rip through her with all the force of a forest fire .
10 And it is not possible for us to know anything at all about him unless he is generous enough to disclose himself Another book in this series has tackled the question of revelation ; suffice it to say at this point that without revelation we can not say anything about the Lord who is Spirit .
11 Suffice it to say at this point that because of the complex and changing world in which the public sector operates , implementation of policies may solve certain problems but is likely to throw up further problems which in turn need to be solved : hence the cyclical nature of the policy-making process .
12 She gave me rather a long look but let it go at that .
13 Ward was changing the subject and l let it go at that .
14 Wycliffe let it go at that .
15 Agnes let it go at that .
16 Let us look at each of these options in turn .
17 If the foregoing suggests the activity of experienced adult readers , let us look at that most basic , apparently neutral , and certainly most mundane , of sentences : ‘ The cat sat on the mat ’ .
18 Let us look at another 1930s Tin Pan Alley tune , Jack Strachey 's ‘ These Foolish Things ’ ( Ex. 2.3 ) .
19 In order to examine this further , let us look at another case .
20 Let us look at this more closely .
21 Let us look at this problem of the nature of phenomena in more detail as it explains some of the difficulties faced by social researchers .
22 Let us look at this in more detail .
23 Let us look at this position in more detail .
24 Let us look at some of the assumptions implicit in ‘ creative drama ’ .
25 Let us look at some examples .
26 With this thought , let us look at some comments made by members .
27 Let us look at some of them .
28 Let us look at some of the forceful arguments against the Copernican system .
29 Let us look at some particular cases .
30 Let us look at some examples :
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