Example sentences of "[vb past] [vb pp] [pron] at [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Dimly doing her best to remember what they 'd taught her at school , Diane believed that she 'd managed to work out the map reference by the time that Ross Aldridge arrived at the Hall . |
2 | He 'd met her at work , which was about the only place where he did meet people these days . |
3 | I got in you know , on this guy he 's oh no , no , he said he he 'd got one at home , he said I ca n't afford blooming two ! |
4 | Er , it 's in the other magazine I fetched from work after the I 'd left them at work . |
5 | Did you notice she says she did n't have owt and she 'd left it at home ? |
6 | Had hated her at sight . |
7 | This was style , as they had taught her at school . |
8 | He reminded her of a mathematics mistress who had taught her at school . |
9 | Most studies focus on school achievement , but this may be misleading because there is evidence to suggest that Afro-Caribbean and Asian students are more likely than white students to stay on in further education and some do manage to obtain academic qualifications that had eluded them at school ( Craft and Craft , 1983 ) , while one investigation suggests that young black people in inner city areas had gained better academic qualifications than white youth in the same areas ( Roberts , Duggan and Noble , 1983 ) , a finding borne out more generally by some other studies ( Brown , 1984 ) . |
10 | Wordsworth 's first publications , An Evening Walk and Descriptive Sketches , appeared in 1793 ; the aim was to bring his name before the public as he felt he had done nothing at university — and , of course , the faint hope of making money . |
11 | A close school friend , Paula Bolwell , 19 , said Sarah had been unhappy when she had visited her at college . |
12 | Barry had told them at school that his Dad had bought him a tarantula . |
13 | Paddick told him it was because he had watched him at work for so long . |
14 | Brian Lara , playing only his second Test after 24 one-dayers , did not last long after Wessels had reprieved him at slip first ball , gloving Bosch down the leg side for David Richardson to snatch a magnificent one-handed catch . |
15 | She had called him at home to check on what time he was coming to pick |
16 | A planchette , they had called it at school . |
17 | An eager public woman appealed to him with the story of her cleaning woman , who had proved herself at fault . |
18 | ‘ This is quite delicious , ’ she remarked to her host , and when he looked over at her quite affably , with no sign of the fury that had enveloped him at lunchtime , she felt that she could , and should , bring the matter into the open . |
19 | He paid her a small allowance , as she , as a married woman , was no longer eligible for the grant that had supported her at university . |
20 | She had hit him at lunchtime — her feelings now were even more murderous . |
21 | They had left her at school as long as they could , because they did n't know what to do with her ; but now she was to take this course and later get a job on a newspaper . |
22 | It was his soft eyes that had put her at ease the first time she met him , when she timidly knocked at his door just a few years ago , the evening when Fred employed a helper and found his future wife . |
23 | But perhaps , by telling him of it she might break through the shell of quiet self-sufficiency and recollection that had kept her at bay since his return from Student Cross . |
24 | The adrenalin of going to a Court had kept it at bay so far but now I could feel the walls closing in again . |