Example sentences of "a [noun sg] [to-vb] at the " in BNC.
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1 | We 're walking back from the shops — me and Marie — and we stop for a bit to look at the lights in the electric shop . |
2 | There 's rows of benches in front of it and I sit down for a bit to look at the tree . |
3 | She skirted its edge and at last spotted a possible entry , finding a stick to whack at the jagged branches of an old dogrose . |
4 | I had for some reason gone up to M. Dupont 's room and was about to knock , but before doing so , as is my custom , I paused for a second to listen at the door . |
5 | In part this has been due to a failure to look at the right parts of the higher order visual cortex , using the right stimuli . |
6 | But it is going to be necessary because , by the time the later subjects come on stream , there will certainly be a need to look at the first ones again , such as maths and science . |
7 | She had n't much to tell him — merely that she had stopped on the bridge for a moment to look at the river , had been attracted by the gulls and then noticed what was exciting them . |
8 | They were both astonished and Lomas stopped for a moment to stare at the floor . |
9 | Maynard was 13–1 up after five ends and 18–4 in front after eight , but his opposite number pulled back with two four counts to leave Reading with a job to do at the finish . |
10 | The next definition , which we formulate from a desire to get at the fundamental building blocks as far as multiplication in Z is concerned , is intentionally unconventional , introducing , as it does , a familiar concept in an unfamiliar way . |
11 | However , there is a slim chance that they will not perform well enough , in which case there will be a surplus to pay at the end of term . |
12 | As a result of this work the Coordinating Committee for Under Fives ( CCUF ) , an umbrella organisation of statutory and voluntary sector groups and individuals providing a service to under fives , decided to organise a conference to look at the issues of integration of special needs children within mainstream provision . |
13 | After Dan had drunk the hot sweet coffee that kept her awake at nights , they moved off , sitting in the small car for a while to look at the map . |
14 | Another ploy I have heard suggested is to knit a garment and give it to , say , a friend to wear at the office . |
15 | I also suggested that Britons should be urged not to ask for a chance to look at the remains until the situation improves . |
16 | Has my right hon. Friend had a chance to look at the Order Paper recently ? |
17 | ‘ It would give a better idea of the effectiveness of co-operation if the public had a chance to look at the frequency with which bombs are transported into Northern Ireland in vehicles stolen in the Republic . |
18 | I climbed a wall to drink at the beck , sitting for a while on its banks in the sun before walking on up the legionaries ' highway crossing the Burtersett road under Green Scar Mire and heading up towards Fleet Moss and Kidhow Gate . |
19 | He is sufficient of a realist to concede at the end of his argument that in fact they did not support him , but supported the argument on behalf of the Attorney-General . |
20 | She paid him eight shillings — or 40p — a week to work at the 16-room house she had inherited . |
21 | She reached for a tissue to dab at the moisture welling in her eyes . |
22 | Graham Game , a full-time green activist , hopes to win a commission to look at the dangers of a spill along the coast of Essex , the county 's prime natural asset . |
23 | It 's a relief to escape at the end of the week by playing football . ’ |
24 | Pliant editors were rewarded with knighthoods , and the Sun 's owner , Rupert Murdoch , was granted a licence to strike at the BBC by establishing the first satellite station , Sky TV . |
25 | It is a mistake to look at the provisions relating to the passing of risk as in some sense enabling one party to score over the other . |
26 | If the shadow is yours , climbing up a ladder to look at the colony , they 'll land on you , and you can collect 100 or more fleas . |
27 | A person , perhaps a porter , said there was not a lot to see at the Marischal College . |
28 | Ellwood did n't want the limelight ; he had a cover to preserve at the Base . |
29 | But I mean it was a hell of a way to work at the same time . |
30 | Given the poor publicity generated by the Soviet Union 's agricultural failings , it comes as something of a surprise to look at the statistics and see that the Soviet Union is still the world 's largest wheat producer , greater than the European Community ( which also made agricultural self-sufficiency a goal in its early years ) by about 10 million tons in 1989 , outstripping the United States and Canada , the world 's ‘ breadbasket ’ , by almost the same amount . |