Example sentences of "[vb past] [adv prt] at [art] [num ord] " in BNC.
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1 | As a member of the Advanced Volunteer Foundation , Gail was one of 750 Canadians who helped out at the fourth annual International Amateur Athletic Foundation indoor track and field meeting . |
2 | The basic recipe is a reduction of white wine and brown fond de veau lié with a julienne of gherkins and mustard stirred in at the last moment . |
3 | Well as you know er to be a basic rate taxpayer , you 're paying twenty five pence in the pound , apart from the er the new rate you know the first two thousand five hundred you get at twenty percent , which came in at the last budget . |
4 | Once again he blasted out at the first attempt , reeling back amid a cloud of sand and covering his eyes . |
5 | It was one of those nights for Swindon … player manager Glenn Hoddle pulled a muscle in the kick-in and dropped out at the last minute … and with David Kerslake having gone to Leeds the defence looked a little shaky … |
6 | It was one of those nights for Swindon … player manager Glenn Hoddle pulled a muscle in the kick-in and dropped out at the last minute … and with David Kerslake having gone to Leeds the defence looked a little shaky … |
7 | In that election the candidate dropped out at the last minute and the only man who could be found to replace him was living in Zambia . |
8 | Ursula and Gianni got off at the next station but one , having brought their growing mutual admiration to a startling climax wedged solid among the rocking mass of sober commuters . |
9 | He got off at the next village and waddled away up a street with his bag of guavas . |
10 | Everyone turned up at the 42nd Street Theatre that night to see Noreen make her New York debut . |
11 | Over 60 turned up at the first two sessions at the town 's Southlands Centre . |
12 | Ant : You do n't like school discos " cos your mum turned up at the last one at nine o'clock to take you home , and Fungus announced it over the mike . |
13 | Graham Fowler made it a double when he teamed up at the last minute with Chris Schaefer from Tennis World and in see-saw men 's double final the Tennis World pair of Ben O'Connor and Peter Ford . |
14 | Make sure you get a copy of the initial ( and any supplementary ) reading list(s) handed out at the first meeting with your class teachers . |
15 | We never normally talked in the morning : he got up at the last moment and rushed out without a word . |
16 | I walked in at the first door I saw . |
17 | Even in that jungly light I see something does n't add up : can a corpse have half a nose and two fingers busted off at the first joint ? |
18 | Ianthe was glad when the woman and her child got out at the next station , for not only did she find the conversation embarrassing but she also wanted to think about the moments before her unexpected meeting with Agnes Dalby — moments which she had so far had no chance of reliving or considering . |
19 | Mrs McIntosh , she knew , had had a young man who pulled out at the last minute ; she might take him in . |
20 | In the event Lin and Chiang pulled out at the last moment , prompting speculation that Lee had made a deal with the conservatives over the reform programme or over Cabinet posts . |
21 | He was never remotely stumped when an item went down at the last moment and the presenter was left with a minute to fill . |
22 | I felt a lump in my throat as I looked down at the first grave , the Balmoral on the cross was torn at the front as if a piece of shrapnel had smashed its way through the badge and into the soldier 's head . |
23 | She nearly dropped the mug but her brain took over at the last instant . |
24 | Boss David McErlain blames poor summer business and a vital sell-off deal that fell through at the last minute for this latest crisis . |
25 | The interview fell through at the last minute … |
26 | But it all fell through at the last moment . |
27 | I took off at the first light and made the rendezvous as planned and found the fighters had just become airborne . |
28 | He promptly went off at the next corner , punctured and limped the last five miles on a flat . |
29 | There is a particularly cold-blooded tycoon lurking in Coopers & Lybrand 's head office — Ian Brummer , a ‘ ruthless ’ computer manager , cleaned up at the first City Monopoly Challenge , virtually bankrupting everyone else in sight . |
30 | Wycliffe looked up at the first tier of planks ; the shot must have been fired from up there . |