Example sentences of "[adv prt] at [det] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
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 | It was cold in the stadium and a leaden sky threatened to weep down at any moment on the small crowd assembled below . |
4 | I sit down at this desk with a ledger . |
5 | 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 . ’ |
6 | What about livestock would they have been in at that time of year ? |
7 | 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 . |
8 | What money did you have coming in at that time in fact ? |
9 | And what sort of conditions were you working in at that time in the shipyards ? |
10 | Having been reduced to ten men after only 15 minutes , they continued to make chance after chance but went in at half time with only two goals of an advantage . |
11 | Town rallied and had a good effort from Kenny Campbell , well saved by keeper , Andy Hopping , after Roger Charles had found him with a great cross , but Harefield went in at half time with a deserved one nil lead . |
12 | They may have tried to get in at another address without success . |
13 | 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 . |
14 | 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 . |
15 | Many of the plants can be put in at any time of year , except for the dahlias . |
16 | Outside of London , too , generally over the South , the West and the South-east , a decline in real wages set in at some point in the two decades centred on 1760 , as money wages fell behind rising prices . |
17 | This is Piladu 's place , but if you ask me there 'll be nobody in at this hour on a Saturday . |
18 | If greater efforts were put in at this level at an early stage , through early warning on emerging conflicts , many major wars could be prevented . |
19 | The solos still grate , but at least you can get the beers in at this point without fear of missing anything serious — although Hammett has included an axe-trashing coda to his widdly-widdly section ; that 's what you get for hanging out with Nirvana . |
20 | 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 . |
21 | And that was the reason why , and in fact the total shortfall , the total unmanning was something like a hundred and thirty-five hundred and forty , which is why the police authority has a bid in at this moment for a , a further sixty-eight policemen , which has in fact been backed by the county council , who are prepared to pay for it . |
22 | But they 're all going to wonder why I dragged you along at this time of night . |
23 | 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 . |
24 | The dark a long way off at each end of the day |
25 | I told him we were simply adapting the phrase from the social security regulations , where for years it has worked perfectly satisfactorily in deciding whether or not a worker should get benefit if he is laid off at another workplace from the one where a dispute is taking place . |
26 | Cara nodded and smiled at the pork butcher as she passed him by , being fond of the pies he would sometimes sell off at half price before closing his shop on a Saturday night . |
27 | Like Miss Honey , she felt sure both ears were going to come off at any moment with all the weight that was on them . |
28 | Any information the client is interested in can be printed off at any stage during the search . |
29 | The encounter can break off at any stage in the process of escalation . |
30 | A Sergeant with a crudely reconstructed pink blob of a nose — obviously bitten off at some stage in his professional or previous career — sat at a damascened bronze data-desk stained green with cupreous patina . |