Example sentences of "[v-ing] [adv] at a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 We were appearing together at a literary lunch in Cleethorpes — he was promoting the latest edition of his diaries — and someone was playing the organ whilst we were eating .
2 We 'll make a hypothetical traverse from Easter Island on the East Pacific Rise ( an oceanic ridge , remember ) right across South America as far as the Mid-Atlantic Ridge , so we 'll be starting at one plate margin , crossing a second and ending up at a third , each of them , of course , marked by a major belt of seismic activity [ see Fig. 2 ] .
3 On the relief the girl Athena , without aegis or shield ( she is shown now even without helmet , or with it in her hand ) leans on her spear , hand on hip , looking down at a small stele .
4 It was only when I was actually up there and the music had stopped , and I found myself looking down at a hundred or so expectant faces , that I remembered the magnitude of the task in front of me .
5 The arrow tip came free and I lay on my side in frightful suffering weakness , looking down at a sharp black point sticking out from scarlet wool .
6 Another few totters and another series of hasty hoppity-skips , and they were looking down at a ramshackle wooden building which sat in a hollow among yellow bushes of gorse .
7 They had their own windows with dark blue oil-cloth roller-blinds through which Dot could see into the compartment of the train alongside just like looking over at a next-door house .
8 She stood outside looking up at a creamy moon , fearful lest some bat might fly into her hair .
9 We soon realise that we are , effectively , looking up at a red ceiling , where the four walls of the room , seen in perspective below , are all decorated with a brace of fishermen .
10 There were further rattles of machine-gun fire and Rex found himself looking up at a troubled sky .
11 Chris was looking back at a colourful four-wheeled cart drawn by two tasselled horses .
12 ‘ did loiter ( or solicit ) ’ Loiter means passing frequently at a slow speed ( Williamson v Wright 1924 SLT 363 ) .
13 There I stood in the fruit shop gazing longingly at a mouth-watering display of peaches .
14 These molecules , the ultimate source of information about what is going on at a specific time in a particular cell , are extremely labile chemically ( for example , to traces of alkaline detergent in less than scrupulously clean glassware ) and enzymatically ( to the ubiquitous ribonuclease ) .
15 Still hurrying along at a hundred miles an hour he leaned over towards me and lowered his voice .
16 On the main highway leading to Charleroi and Brussels the Dragoons were clattering along at a fine pace , almost as if this was an exercise in Provence instead of war .
17 In both programmes , spectators happen to be present , peering in at a comic version of the star 's life .
18 erm and the North Koreans were going backwards at a vast rate of knots and in came the Chinese the Chinese army , it stood at that time I think at twenty five million men erm and , and Douglas started losing again , sad really is n't it ?
19 It is our intention to keep goods turning over at a livelier pace and it would therefore be appreciated if you would return any goods which you are unable to sell .
20 ‘ It hardly shows , ’ said Cadfael thoughtfully , going off at a surprising tangent .
21 You 're talking about er three thirty mil going out at a premium price , erm your one litre at an economy price and your two litre back at a premium price .
22 The two judgment tasks were practised twice on the roads preceding the actual test route , once when turning left at a large roundabout and once when turning right at an unsignalized T-junction .
23 ‘ They will have their tails up and I do n't think we could be going there at a harder time .
24 Mr Michael Poynor , the adjudicator , commended director Harry Foy for an energetic production which kept the action moving along at a fast pace .
25 You can find me through the Friends , ’ and he pressed his horse 's flanks , moving away at a steady pace .
26 Her call came after the surrender of the last group of rebels holding out at a military air base at Mactan in the central Philippines .
27 He was speaking today at a Tory Reform Group fringe meeting in Bournemouth .
28 It starts at zero and eventually the galaxies are moving apart at a steady speed .
29 He began hanging out at a seedy bar where transvestites , gay guys in leather jackets , and even butch lesbians , would lay him across a table and then crawl all over him .
30 Through the wide forward unopening windows there was a riveting view of the rails stretching ahead , signals shining green in the distance , trees flashing back at a useful seventy miles an hour .
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