Example sentences of "[vb -s] at least [art] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 VMS also offers the best clustering facilities and host functionality , and has at least a measure of openness with the addition of VMS Posix compliance .
2 Easily as such writing can , on occasion , include the narcissistic or the vacuously ludic , it has at least the capacity to be seriously — or wittily — challenging , an enabling enhancement of its readers ' vision and decisiveness .
3 In particular , Germany can be expected to become more outspoken in its demands that Britain surrenders at least a part of its ‘ budget rebate ’ , finally clinched by Mrs Thatcher in 1988 .
4 It employs at least a quarter of a million people , in operations large and small .
5 It takes at least a couple of seconds before I recognize the last straw .
6 Words and names , as we all know from everyday experience , possess magical power : naming and identifying experiences and things imposes some degree of control over them and gives at least the illusion of bringing them within our power .
7 The ‘ original ’ actually fits Taylor , Walton and Young 's argument rather better than the amended version they quote above which implies at least the possibility of poverty as a cause of ‘ rational ’ crime .
8 One must , I think , start from the general premise that the protection of the child 's welfare implies at least the protection of the child 's life .
9 Either tactic offers at least a chance of keeping trouble to the minimum .
10 To the inner city local authority it offers at least the promise of retaining some economic activities that would otherwise leave the area ; and to the inner city resident it offers the prospect , as well as often the reality , of countryside recreation and relaxation .
11 Since the acquisition of premises ( other than where the entrepreneur purchases the premises as a going concern and merely takes over an existing catering enterprise ) normally involves at least a change of use and often the development of the premises , planning permission is required .
12 Any mention of radiocarbon dating necessarily involves at least a reference to dendrochronology , and the basic principles of this powerful technique are therefore also outlined ( see p.125 ) .
13 Chapter 5 ( " Word Play in Action " ) promises at least a look at the socio-linguistic context of jokes , with particular emphasis on , and analysis of , real joke-capping sessions ; and Chiaro is to be commended for tackling an interesting aspect of joke-telling , in relation to discourse analysis , that has generally been neglected in book-length studies .
14 Psychoanalysis provides at least a language for talking about these matters , and contains useful speculative hypotheses .
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