Example sentences of "[vb past] [be] [adv] at the " in BNC.

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1 The equipment which saved Ray was bought by the Thame business United Biscuits , and some of the staff who contributed were also at the pub today to meet the man who owes his life to their generosity .
2 He 'd been away at the time of the murder but if , as seemed likely , he 'd been having an affair with Angy … suppose he was married and his wife had found out , and taken the opportunity while her husband was absent to do away with her rival ?
3 Maggie immediately thought of the lack of seagulls she 'd noticed when she 'd been down at the sea-front .
4 It was just that , well , I heard he 'd been down at the police station this morning .
5 She 'd been there at the time he 'd wanted a woman .
6 They 'd been there at the wedding , when the wine , that water had been turned into wine .
7 I was n't going for his agreement or anyone else 's agreement — I was going for what I felt was right at the time , and as he 'd set me up as this person in his life , I advised him not to do it .
8 Sometimes there would be an extra pause that was n't scripted , but which he felt was right at the time .
9 Slorne , who had been up at the back of her cage most of the day as usual , suddenly opened her wings , swung round and dropped down to the front of her cage .
10 Jean , surely , had been here at the time of the murder .
11 While I had been away at the Wye , the silver-grey had either moved her family to a new nest of had fallen foul of a fisherman 's trap .
12 If International had been around at the time of the Vikings , there 's little doubt whose paint would have been used to keep those marauding longships in prime condition .
13 A few days before Anthony 's death they had been together at the Lancaster Road Baths watching local semi-professional boxers .
14 His wife in her innocence told us he had been down at the steamer when we landed and had slipped out of sight , and next morning he had left at six o'clock to go and visit a small island North of Jura where he had never been known to go before . "
15 Perhaps , she thought it was because Mark had been there at the planning stage — Mark Bristow , the dynamic young advertising executive she had met and fallen in love with when she had been chasing jobs in the heart of Somerset ; Mark who , in spite of being English , had lived long enough in the States to absorb — and give off — some of the typically American blend of enthusiasm and energy .
16 But he had been there at the right time , he had acted swiftly and effectively and she was alive .
17 For when he had been there at the end of the war it was very much the preserve of the officer class .
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