Example sentences of "[vb past] [verb] [pers pn] at the " in BNC.

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1 When screening began we agreed to discontinue it at the end of the first year if there were a number of traumatised families .
2 ‘ I expected to see you at the ball last night , Sharpe ! ’
3 His ex-wife Margaret claims he tried to kill her at the family home in Brockhampton .
4 ‘ Somebody tried to phone her at the flat .
5 But I 've got a lot of time for Tom Clarke , he 's a nice man and it would be absolutely disgusting if anyone tried to dump him at the moment . ’
6 Margaret Jones claims her husband tried to murder her at the family home in Brockhampton , by pumping exhaust fumes from the garage into her bedroom .
7 McFarlane , who in his more sober Methodist way felt much the same , tried to explain it at the hearings .
8 She 'd heard him at the glass door — a double knock , very light .
9 They drove to see him at the Chapel of Repose .
10 ‘ You 've got chilblains ! ’ their mother said when she came to see them at the beginning of December .
11 Although my household and ARP duties did not allow of a visit to the Western hospital some folk came to see us at the main post , and laugh at the fact that the Steward of the hospital had had to send the last of his well-trained clerks to Egypt to help count the number of prisoners and try to get the provision for them in some sort of order .
12 ‘ His agent came to see us at the St Louis Lollapalooza show , and we talked about the possibility of doing something together .
13 It was four hours later when they woke to find him at the foot of the bed saying : ‘ I 've got a gun and I 'm going to shoot you . ’
14 I 'd met her at the odd party where we 'd chatted and that 's about it . ’
15 I suppose the fact that I 'd made it at the age of 14 was important because it meant I would go a long way in athletics .
16 He asked the old man if he knew Miss Lavant , if he 'd seen her at the fete , in clothes with buttercups on them .
17 He recognised Kurz and Hinterstoisser , he 'd seen them at the hotel ; strikingly handsome fellows , especially Kurz , an officer of the Wehrmacht , blue-eyed , blond-haired .
18 Well Laura and Gemma wanted to make these pasties and she 'd asked me at the weekend and I did n't have the time because I think Irene came down cos I asked Irene whether she 'd looked after , you know I 'm at college until three , and she said yeah I 'll pick them up and er I could n't get her out at then so I promised she could make them so , I said alright you and Gemma make them , anyway they did very well they made them in about fifteen minutes because we had to go and get Emily at four from school , I said hurry up , hurry up put the water in Emily quick stick them together shove them now and put them in the oven
19 They were almost shouting at one another , and both seemed to realise it at the same time .
20 Miranda thought of M. Apéritif last night , and decided she would let him go further when she next saw him , in spite of the lizard darting of his small and oddly hard tongue in the kiss she 'd allowed him at the door of the hotel .
21 When he 'd left her at the entrance to Newcastle Place the day Pa died she 'd ached with disappointment that she might never see him again .
22 He 'd left her at the inn without so much as a word , and here he was , calmly indulging his hobby while she 'd had to trek after him .
23 So somebody had to tell him he 'd left them at the
24 She got the reel of film through customs without any trouble , and a man came to collect it at the hotel .
25 One morning I arrived to find him at the supremely mundane task of " plugging muck " , standing on a manure heap , hurling steaming forkfuls on to a cart .
26 After a few days of this treatment , Moz began to feel less threatened by his owner , and began to greet her at the gate .
27 Kate had decided to skip the afternoon 's classes and arranged to meet him at the boatyard near the Tech .
28 She 's a friend of Bertice Reading , who is working at the Prince of Wales Theatre , so I arranged to meet her at the stage door at 2 o'clock .
29 Moses , for instance , was a whimpering mass of inferiority as God began to commission him at the burning bush .
30 Tate left a number of finished canvases which had never been shown and Edwin decided to release them at the rate of one a year through Ismay Gorton 's , the London gallery which handles his work .
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