Example sentences of "[adv prt] [adv prt] at the [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Because , although it 's before nine erm , the next morning erm you 're actually giving them now more lead time , you 've given them another day because an , sometime tomorrow you know , if it gets there at two o'clock and it 's off-loading in in in at the bay and someone checks that it 's been received and then someone makes a phone call to tell them it 's there , and then they 're doing something else , and then they come down and have a look at it , how many boxes do you think are sitting on loading bays that do n't get looked at for a day or two , or three , or four , five when they 've had a next day service ? |
2 | But as it was Dod , I took my fifty quid and free ploughman 's lunches ( not that Canning Town 's seen a ploughman since Shakespeare packed 'em in over at the Globe in Southwark ) and we humped boxes and sat in traffic jams and set the world to rights . |
3 | But one of the things , obvious at first , that , one of the first things about any kind of journalism apart from apart from , in your specialist journals and so on , is that they 're about newspapers are about people , so obviously get the people in and there 's a , a very good very good you 've got the person , you 've got you 've got you 've got someone in up at the top and saying something . |
4 | He went back down under at the end of ‘ 89 and ran away with the Australian Order of Merit with three wins — using a Sam Torrance putter . |
5 | ‘ If so , perhaps you can tell me what has been going on up at the Hall that has made Miss Hatherby stop your lessons . ’ |
6 | He expects me to carry on up at the manor as though it 's just another working day. ? |
7 | Like one of those European taxis that you get picked up in at the airport in Paris . ’ |
8 | She could hear the clatter of iron shutters being cranked up over at the amusement arcades . |
9 | They completed a circular walk through the woods , tramping through leaves and bracken and ending up back at the minibus where Sybil announced it was time to go back to Conway House for lunch . |
10 | After a while , the lad turned up back at the farm and offered to work for two shillings and pay his own insurance stamp . |
11 | When he turns up back at the flat , he has a bunch of red gladioli . |
12 | Now that target internally is is a figure for us to be working on back at the camp . |
13 | I keep as many of your letters as I can store to look back on at the turn of the century , which we 're both going to see ! |
14 | The T'ang looked back down at the folder and at the summary Shepherd had appended to the front of his report . |
15 | Sighing , Cowley looked back down at the operation . |
16 | He looked back down at the map again . |
17 | He sighed and looked back down at the page before closing the book . |
18 | Blanche held the man 's gaze for a second and glanced back down at the piece of paper . |
19 | One of them , a tall Hung Mao sat apart from the rest , looked up as the three men approached , then , with the vaguest movement of his head to indicate that they should go on up , looked back down at the rifle in his lap , continuing his meticulous inspection of the weapon . |
20 | to be , group , she 's , her daughter is forty odd , but she still helps out down at the school |
21 | ‘ Years ago we threw the old didacticism ( dowdy morality ) out of the window ; it has come back in at the door wearing modern dress ( smart values ) and we do not even recognize it ’ ( p. 159 ) . |
22 | ‘ I was on about 12,000 revs and tried to bring the wheel back in at the apex of the corner , ’ James said , ‘ but it was too far gone and that was it . |
23 | Spatz looked aside , then looked back up at the Marshal , choosing his words carefully . |
24 | KQ VI may be criticised as being too easy and not achieving anything new — forget that , it is good old fashioned family entertainment , and with now Kings Quest VI and Quest for Glory III Sierra are back up at the top of the pile ! |
25 | Lever looked back up at the screen , watching the young T'ang step down into the darkness . |
26 | He glanced back up at the house , where warm orange light spilled out from the dining room into the grey afternoon . |
27 | If you like I 'll ask around back at the church and see if I can find out what 's on offer . ’ |
28 | ‘ You mean , about down at the Cove ? ’ |