Example sentences of "that [noun] [verb] [to-vb] at " in BNC.

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1 The second is that drivers like to retain at least one common link with those fans who do n't have private jets , Boss jeans , impossibly lithe blondes etc .
2 They took it as a snub that Down failed to field at anything approaching full strength and now want to show that they are a match for the real thing .
3 ‘ … we find it unfortunate that Upjohn failed to respond at all readily to requests made by the Licensing Authority as early as 1990 , that they should carry out a new post-marketing surveillance study ’ .
4 A case in point was a series of devastating strikes that Finniston had to weather at British Steel in 1974 .
5 He added that imports had to continue at competitive levels to safeguard jobs in the processing industry .
6 If we can trust the figures which suggest that Christians tended to marry at a notably higher age than their pagan contemporaries , Christianity would appear to have reinforced these shifts towards marriage as a more personal and free partnership of equals .
7 If we take the research on goals plus the experience of practitioners in the selection business we will find a high degree of consensus about the more frequently cited goals that individuals attempt to satisfy at work .
8 ‘ I 've been hearing a few things about this boy that s come to live at Beech Place .
9 I was n't supposed to be a novelty that people come to look at , like we became in the Beatles .
10 ‘ However , with the most recent figures showing less than 40pc of even full-term infants being breast-fed at six weeks , human milk is the standard that milk-manufacturers need to aim at . ’
11 He was only an office worker , of course , a clerk of sorts , Sally had said , not quite in the class that Paula intended to aim at , but very presentable for all that .
12 Do not over-estimate the cards that Britain has to play at Strasbourg .
13 It follows , of course , that selectors have to look at very different criteria when choosing their teams , and nowhere is this more evident than in the field .
14 Their constituency was the silent majority of music paper readers that critics love to sneer at : students , ex-students , and those destined to be students ( sixth formers and fifth formers ) .
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