Example sentences of "[be] at the [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 The objective will be a realistic specification that can be met by a wide variety of suppliers , but the final say in the specs will be left with the service suppliers , making it highly likely that Unix System V.4 will be at the core of the specification .
2 The Galapagos gave rise to one particular dispute between the two men — one which was to prove , much later — to be at the core of the problem of evolution .
3 On it was written : ‘ Please , please , burn this letter , and be at the gate by ten o'clock .
4 And your letter said : ‘ Please , please , burn this letter , and be at the gate by ten o'clock ’ . ’
5 That was one thing Andrew could n't do , because he had to be at the Works by eight o'clock and Emma did n't start school until nine .
6 Beekeepers of all denominations will be at the harvest with a difference and the preacher will be the Rev Sam Millar , of Hazelbank Presbyterian Church , in Coleraine — another beekeeper .
7 TO be at the birth of Britain 's newest steam locomotive must be impressive .
8 I want to be at the border by then and that 's two hundred and fifty miles after Tam . ’
9 They missed the train connection in Glasgow which meant that they could not be at the hotel by seven o'clock .
10 The women 's race looks set for the second successive year to be at the mercy of Rosa Mota , a winner at Olympic and world level as well as the three times European champion .
11 Every man 's hand will be against him and gassing , snaring and poisoning will be the order of the day , with perhaps a bounty on his brush and he will be at the mercy of every council official , cowboy and yobbo in the country .
12 His daytime fear is that ordinary people in the coming , computerised society ‘ could be at the mercy of the technocrats ’ .
13 The Genoese city of Famagusta did not intend to be at the mercy of Mamelukes .
14 Within two or three years , the majority of a grafted vine 's network would be dependent not upon the grafted roots , but upon the regenerated root system of the producing vine and as such would be at the mercy of phylloxera .
15 Unlike other fuels you wo n't be at the mercy of the volatile world energy market either .
16 He was to be at the mercy of both and early on he knew it .
17 For the election of the other four you will be at the mercy of other people 's votes .
18 The range of oriental rugs on offer in a dealer 's showroom or department store is overwhelming , and you may feel yourself to be at the mercy of the salesman .
19 If there is no non-contingent link between behaviour and mental state ( that is , if we accept ( a ) ) , we shall never be able to show ( b ) to be true , and hence we shall be at the mercy of a local scepticism of the very strongest form ( cf. 1.1 ) .
20 He seemed to me to be at the mercy of waves that tossed him back and forth between then and now : the real-and-actual and the desired .
21 The prosperity of the Catalan economy had thus come to be at the mercy of events outside Spain .
22 Most action was bound to be like this — a span , long or short , in which one did nothing — could do nothing except be at the mercy of one 's nerves — and then the moment , the test …
23 Something neither short nor long , beginning with V. Somewhere in or near Paris , though how near could be at the mercy of French postal zoning .
24 ‘ And Fenella would be at the mercy of Goibniu and the rest .
25 Future pension rates will be at the mercy of employers who take over subsidiaries of the Scottish Bus Group .
26 Future pension rates will be at the mercy of employers who take over subsidiaries of the Scottish Bus Group .
27 Even if there were agreement , much of the disputed territory would still be at the mercy of both Serb and Croat irregulars , acting outside the control of their Government , and those forces would continue to be a source of fighting and unrest unless they were disarmed .
28 You would be at the mercy of the hall 's acoustics and ideally you would need to practise a bit beforehand .
29 Other radicals demanded that foreign policy should no longer be at the mercy of " the ideas , valuations and methods of a sporting aristo-plutocracy " or " the obscure convolutions of diplomatic staffs " , that " there must be an end of the secret diplomacy which has plunged us into this catastrophe " and that the working classes should " lay down our own terms , make our own proclamations , establish our own diplomacy " .
30 Barring a last-minute volte-face by the MoD , the aircraft will then be at the mercy of the highest bidder , who might just be a scrap dealer .
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