Example sentences of "[adv prt] at [det] [noun] of " in BNC.

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1 From the parking area above , you can easily walk down at either end of the crag , but it 's much more fun to follow the path leftwards and make a free 25 metres abseil through the blow-hole in the roof of the enormous cave of Baume Percée .
2 His hands came down at either side of her , trapping her against the wall .
3 Shifts split up the family so that men would be coming in at all hours of the day , waiting for the bath-tin and the water and a woman to wash their backs .
4 But you were too young to realise just how much work you have to put in at that stage of building up a business , how much effort it takes to hold the whole thing together and stop it from collapsing around you . ’
5 What about livestock would they have been in at that time of year ?
6 So erm in fairness to him I think he was plunged into something he did n't have a hell in er hope in at that time of coping with .
7 The twin solutions to equation ( 9.15 ) of equal positive and negative phase shifts correspond to the possibility of feeding a signal in at either end of the symmetric section and loading it with its characteristic impedance at the other end .
8 Donations to the ‘ Around the Isles ’ charity fund for multiple sclerosis may be paid in at any branch of the Halifax Building Society and Bank of Scotland .
9 Many of the plants can be put in at any time of year , except for the dahlias .
10 He often dropped in at this time of day , and frequently stayed for a drink on the veranda and an inspection of Faye 's work in the air-conditioned studio at the back of the house that would be used more and more as the hot summer approached .
11 But they 're all going to wonder why I dragged you along at this time of night .
12 The gap between the two , although only a few metres wide , is deep enough for my boat to pass through at any state of tide .
13 The dark a long way off at each end of the day
14 they 've lined one up at each end of the field so it , it looks like they 're saying , well , you know that 's a parcel of land .
15 Alongside the formal structures , a network of informal relationships has grown up at all levels of the organization .
16 ‘ I do n't remember it coming up at that meeting of Senate , ’ says Philip .
17 ‘ Live in a box , do n't you , up at that farm of yours ?
18 A product of the tail-end of the Northern Soul scene ( a mid-'70s underground dance phenomenon equivalent to electro/acid 's renegade '90s appeal ) , Tony and Gordon met up at that hotbed of creativity , Stockport Tech and settled in Sheffield .
19 A product of the tail-end of the Northern Soul scene ( a mid-'70s underground dance phenomenon equivalent to electro/acid 's renegade '90s appeal ) , Tony and Gordon met up at that hotbed of creativity , Stockport Tech and settled in Sheffield .
20 Rival villages would line up at either end of the green to do this .
21 It is difficult to get skips in this age group capable of keeping their end up at this level of competition .
22 While up at this end of the guitar , I must mention the headstock shape .
23 Of course , she was not normally up at this time of the morning .
24 There are many other more elaborate braids and edgings which are great fun to knit if you keep your machine set up at this time of year , as it is a good time to play with new ideas and perhaps to knit enough to edge that beautiful Chanel-type jacket you are going to knit later , but the simple knitted binding or a simple rouleau takes a lot of beating and always loos fashionable , elegantly simple and stylish .
25 What on earth are you doing waking the whole world up at this time of night ?
26 With the reversal of tidal currents deltas can be built up at both ends of the strait .
27 We both know that we can — and have done — ring each other up at any hour of the day or night .
28 And when you do finally get to bed , you ca n't lock yourself in and you may be woken up at any time of the night on any pretext .
29 Research can be carried out at all sorts of levels ; we could restrict ourselves simply to reading everything we can find and produce a piece of work which was wholly based on documentary sources and which did not involve us in attending any baptisms or asking anyone involved any questions .
30 ‘ We clergy , ’ said the Reverend Pat Tilley grandly , ‘ get called on and out at all sorts of odd times .
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