Example sentences of "[to-vb] [noun pl] at the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Darlington council yesterday agreed to demolish sheds at the motive diesel works east of Melland Street and landscape the site as part of the Railside Revival scheme .
2 The decision by the Swedish authorities to restart operations at the plant , which had been closed down in September because of a flaw in the emergency cooling system [ see ED 63 ] , has been strongly criticized in Denmark .
3 When he struggled to find winners at the start of the season , the cries of gleeful recrimination reached a crescendo .
4 The German government has offered to spend £82 million over the next seven years to make the plant safe , and Electricite de France has agreed to train technicians at the plant which suffers from a shortage of skilled workers due to poor working conditions and low pay .
5 They were no longer committed to a debtors ' prison at the instance of the man to whom they still owed money , to suffer indignities at the hands of a Thomas Bambridge .
6 Meanwhile students at the lecture got the chance to pitch questions at the minister on a range of subjects from Maastricht to the loss of his private life .
7 In the morning the two sides shared the four Foursomes matches but therein hides a tale of powerful enough to displace Neighbours at the top of the TV ratings .
8 ‘ The world itself is God 's greatest miracle ’ , he wrote , defending God 's freedom to work miracles at the cost of dissolving the idea of a nature which is subject to its own laws in the freedom of the divine will .
9 Detectives believe she had been intending to meet friends at the bar but ended up drinking alone .
10 It is a place to be warm , a place to be dry , a place to hang up my jacket and to pull faces at the storm outside .
11 And generally speaking , they had left the special schools of , is it St Christophers in er Lincoln , and er other special schools , and they were not , they had n't had sufficient er work experience or knowledge of the possible market to find jobs at the moment .
12 As the weeks go by she begins to receive visitors at the refuge and when she begins to feel the marriage is over , with the workers ' help she starts negotiating with the council and housing associations for a new flat , although she also feels the refuge is home , a safe space that is becoming more and more difficult to leave .
13 On one of these dates , Wednesday 20 October , the Faculty of Science and Engineering is holding an Information Day , specifically for students wishing to visit departments at the science and engineering campus before finalising their application for a university place .
14 There have been a number of attempts to define languages at the assembler level which would be portable from one computer to another ; the compatible computer ranges of the previous section are , of course , one such attempt .
15 It has power to request further information from the parties and to inspect documents at the parties ' premises and failure by the parties to provide the information required or to co-operate in an inspection may cause the four month period to be extended .
16 Sarah Smith has been giving a regular class to stroke victims at the Oak Park Stroke Club in Havant .
17 David Poole , who came into ballet in Cape Town a few months before John Cranko in 1944 , described his beginnings : how he saw his first ballet performance on a Saturday night at City Hall , spoke to friends there of his desire to dance , and on the Sunday was told by them that they had arranged with Dulcie Howes for him to attend classes at the University Ballet School .
18 She was a clever woman with obscure sources of energy who would suddenly start to garden by torchlight late at night , or walk wilfully all the way to Soho to buy vegetables at the times when the pin in her hipbone was especially painful .
19 The National Trust 's Ryedale Centre raised more than £3,000 to aid improvements at the trust 's landmarks , Nunnington Hall , The Bridestones and Bransdale .
20 They were given authority to make decisions to help guests at the point of contact .
21 The general principle of proportional representation is surely a more democratic one than any system which tends to over-represent majorities at the cost of under-representing minorities — if they are lucky enough to be represented at all .
22 THE SON of a British Army officer yesterday described to the Aldington libel jury in the High Court how his late father told him of his ‘ horror ’ when he received the order to repatriate Cossacks at the end of the second world war .
23 You ought to be strong enough by then to cope with the journey , and I can try to organise things at the hospital so that my assistants can cope . ’
24 To avoid queues at the Theatre box office patrons wishing to pay by credit card must do so 24 hours in advance of the performance .
25 To avoid queues at the entrance , Disney will normally let guests into the Main Street area about half an hour before opening .
26 He was really going to buy cigars at the shop next door , but I saw the sugar mice in the window and he could n't get me away until he came in and bought some .
27 Division Two men 's club Ware and Third Division North London have each been fined £150 for failing to fulfil fixtures at the weekend .
28 ‘ It is an achievement to play games at the moment , as we are literally living from hand to mouth .
29 If you use the front hand on the mast you end up having to cross arms at the sheeting in stage .
30 Already he was beginning to steal glances at the clock , comparing it needlessly with his own watch , missing bits of the film while he made rapid calculations as to whether he might conceivably be able to see Bridget home , and , when this had become out of the question , as to how long they would have to say good night at the hated corner .
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