Example sentences of "[vb infin] [noun sg] at [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | The endometrium itself will undergo change at the point of implantation . |
2 | During a debate on party organisation , some representatives complained that Conservative Central Office was not providing Tory workers with the necessary back-up to sustain and win support at the grass roots . |
3 | To cap it all , cable-car access from the other side would guarantee tea at the top and a tourist audience — what more was needed ? |
4 | Will I need room at the top and bottom of the stairs ? |
5 | His sister did n't need anger at the moment , and it was only his concern that had allowed it to escape . |
6 | On Aug. 17 , the Australian Foreign Affairs Minister , Gareth Evans announced that his government would introduce legislation at the end of 1990 banning mining in the Australian zone , totalling about 42 per cent of Antarctica . |
7 | An average exposure and development would give a high contrast negative which would need manipulation at the printing stage to show shadow and highlight detail in the finished print . |
8 | A neighbour who did not give evidence at the trial of Lisa and Michelle Taylor has said she saw a girl resembling Alison , 21 , arrive home at 6pm on the night she was stabbed . |
9 | At Enniskillen Courthhouse tomorrow 31 witnesses , including four soldiers , will give evidence at the inquest into the three IRA men 's deaths . |
10 | Those who do no speak Spanish at the moment need not feel put off — it is surprising how quickly a language can be learned . |
11 | ‘ They do n't speak English at the garage ? ’ |
12 | I will not give way at the moment , although I may later . |
13 | Most of the scriptures are all out , out to achieve that because they had to acha achieve perfection at the end of the day did n't they ? |
14 | And Colin Powell , former player and now head groundsman , insists : ‘ It may look chaos at the moment , but actually there 's only a little bit of tidying up to do . ’ |
15 | Now we could use plasterboard at a fraction of the price and put it up in the fraction of the time . |
16 | I would have liked to have done better in the League this season , but I can see light at the end of the tunnel now . |
17 | The significance of that will become plain at the end of the next passage of the story , one of the strangest and one of the most profound in the entire Bible . |
18 | You can still use foam at the top and bottom . |
19 | The consequences of erecting barriers — even if we could do that — to produce and use fuel at a price that we could achieve only if we erected those barriers would have a direct effect on the cost of power . |
20 | But Price Waterhouse say they are confident the original directors can run Dale at a profit . |
21 | People do like alcohol at a funeral . ’ |
22 | Although Elstone reckons that no more reorganisation will be necessary in the near future , he does n't believe performance at the division will improve markedly until the recession is over . |
23 | Perhaps they can not see potential at a ground shorn of its wooden stands and surrounded by deprivation . |
24 | Local band Forever After will provide entertainment at the Vale of Derwent Social Club , Rowlands Gill , Gateshead , from 8pm . |
25 | But patients will begin treatment at the centre from April 13 . |
26 | Not only are peak users paying for the high marginal costs they impose , but also those users who would not mind consuming at a different time ( e.g. households with night storage heaters , who can use electricity at a time when marginal costs are low ) are induced by cheaper prices to switch to consuming at off-peak times . |
27 | Anthony Wilkinson , 40 , of Belgrave Street , Darlington , will face trial at the Crown Court . |
28 | In the end , de Gaulle could only secure peace at the expense of a series of humiliating concessions to the FLN — concessions which could be justified only on the grounds that they averted the yet higher costs of not making them . |
29 | Even up here in the wood miles away from the class-room Philip felt his face burn at the way he 'd made a fool of himself . |
30 | She wondered idly how he had occupied the evening , then felt her face burn at the memory of his low opinion of her . |