Example sentences of "[vb pp] [adv prt] at [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Manual adjustment of the model was carried out at intervals of the refinement .
2 The trials , organised by the British Medical Research Council and the French National AIDS Research Agency , were carried out at centres in the UK , France and Ireland from October 1988 .
3 Cooke hopes these research findings — along with work carried out at universities near his company 's base in Cheshire — will persuade other governments in arid areas to try polymers .
4 Usually the largest bars are broken through at intervals by tidal inlets especially where powerful rivers reach the coast .
5 There have been no stations opened up at settlements of this size .
6 Regular worshippers may have been as sparse then as they are today but he was a person to whom one turned in times of trouble , just as he was called on at times of family celebration .
7 During his round trip ‘ described to death ’ the boat would have called in at ports on the way and the passengers would have had time to wander whilst goods were unloaded and loaded .
8 Summed up at intervals during the talk — this was well done .
9 TRADE unionists have hit out at letters to hospital workers which they claim are ‘ begging for money ’ to fund the health service .
10 Meanwhile , RADIO 5 have hit back at allegations in The Sunday Times that the station is to close .
11 The hunting season for the palombe is short but deadly , and if you go up into the hills while it is on , the local men will be crouched there in their camouflage jackets , or lined up at stands along the roads , their shotguns aimed hungrily out over the valley .
12 As part of the NSE marketing drive , notices giving details of local places to visit have been put up at stations along the line , including the intermediate stops at Bures and Chappel and Wakes Colne — home of the East Anglian Railway Museum .
13 The first crop , taken out at intervals of 30 years or more , was that of standard trees for timber production .
14 And something I have not seen anywhere else , though it makes good sense , is that in these mainly narrow streets , the shops have their signs strung out at right-angles across the way so that you can stand at one end and read their names from there , without having to go down to look at them one by one .
15 Money collected as a result can be paid in at branches of the Halifax Building Society and will be given to the Barnardos charity .
16 And when , in 1983 , The Guggenheim Museum opened its doors to the ‘ return of painting ’ with an exhibition devoted to Transavanguardia , works by the ‘ 3Cs ’ ( Chia , Cucchi and Clemente ) , were snapped up at prices in excess of $50,000 .
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