Example sentences of "on at the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 One desk lamp was switched on at the far end of the room , one candle , round , red , squat , burned on her bedside table .
2 And putting coals on at the far end .
3 My interpretation of what is going on at the present day is being saved for the next chapter , but some of the most startling results come from the latest ( and most accurately dated ) deposits .
4 I do not deny uniformitarianism in its true sense , that is to say , of interpreting the past by means of the processes that we see going on at the present day , so long as we remember that the periodic catastrophe ( including sudden events like the rush of a turbidity current ) is one of those processes .
5 The only place where this type of sedimentation seems to be going on at the present day is in the ocean depths , where the deposits consist mainly of the remains of minute pelagic organisms , literally raining down from a watery heaven , plus volcanic dust raining down more intermittently from the aerial heaven above .
6 pending discussions but the whole thing Mr chairman really has n't erm has n't been decided to you know er a few colleagues point er I mean there 's nothing we can actually start and you can put pencil to paper on at the present time .
7 There 's a lot of shelling and mortaring going on at the other end of the village . ’
8 Making her way to the bookcase , she was weighing up the possibility of reading the title spines without putting on the light when a table-lamp was clicked on at the other end of the room .
9 That tradition lives on at the Banzai Pipeline , not so much the Wembley Stadium of surfing as its Coliseum .
10 From London you can be putting your boots on at the Bloody Bridge car park in less than three hours if you have a mind to .
11 That 's the Stamford Bridge in East Yorkshire not the one which gives David Mellor a stork on at the mere mention of the place .
12 Even when she was too tired to read she sought escape in romance-cubes she spent all her wages on at the Madreidetic shop .
13 Mark listened aghast at the naive and dangerous idealism of the young , starry-eyed politician , who was light years away from knowing what really went on at the sharp end of European and international trade .
14 No , you can not prevent it from happening — but scientists are a bit nearer to understanding what goes on at the molecular level .
15 You put that on at the right time
16 I had been the last to get on at the previous station , so I was standing with my back wedged against the window .
17 Carry the Lecfile with you , containing perhaps two or three of the last sheets that you were working on at the previous lecture .
18 The trend in a number of large corporate structures to remove layers of management to allow better communication and a clearer view of what is actually going on at the productive base is recognition that clear , unambiguous communication is a further mainspring in developing an organisation .
19 General Pershing is the one to be on at the big race .
20 Quite apart from this impulsive folly , there was another reason for Leopold to be anxious : Wolfgang had written that on being turfed out of the archbishop 's lodgings he had taken refuge with his friends the Webers , who had left Munich for Vienna in 1779 when Aloysia was taken on at the German opera .
21 She did n't know much about art before but there was an exhibition of my Old Masters going on at the Royal Academy and she saw that , and was very enthusiastic about it , especially the Holbein portrait of Henry VIII .
22 Codron tried to get it on at the Royal Court — on the face of things , an ideal setting-but it was turned down there , too .
23 ‘ Less aggro signing on at the Social Security . ’
24 Monumental Reputation : Robert Adam and the Emperor 's Palace is on at the National Library of Scotland from 1 June to 30 September 1992 , and at Kenwood , London , from 4 November 1992 to 28 February 1993 .
25 The Boat , Caravan and Leisure show is on at the National Exhibition Centre this week and so far it 's attracted record crowds .
26 what is on at the local theatre ;
27 Thus , for example , in order to understand what is going on at the local outside-level on Lewis , it is necessary to examine the structure of the oil industry as a whole .
28 She had n't been privy to the goings on at the opposite end of the table , but she had a distinct , almost tactile memory of the girl fleeing , the usual calm repose of her features fractured .
29 Gascoigne took it , John Barnes flicked on at the near post and Platt arrived behind him to head in his 13th England goal .
30 A Paul Gascoigne corner in the 13th minute was flicked on at the near post by John Barnes and Platt arrived behind him to head in his 13th England goal .
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