Example sentences of "to the [noun pl] at the " in BNC.

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1 And I 'll report that to the stewards at the meeting on er on Thursday as the initiative came from them .
2 The Regional Committees will not be involved in paying fees and expenses to the coaches at the School .
3 Justifying the appointment of teacher consultants , Sir Keith Joseph said to the delegates at the 1985 CLEA conference :
4 Meanwhile , however , the peace process received a further setback with the renewed approval by the US Congress of humanitarian aid to the contras at the end of March 1989 .
5 It was an enormous red folly with balconies all around the back and to the gardens at the sides , and had been divided into apartments .
6 Phyllis stood by the fence and looked down to the lines at the bottom .
7 Father used to demonstrate it to the boys at the grammar school when he was teaching history there . ’
8 She drove past and round to the garages at the rear .
9 I crouched , shivering with cold , until I was dragged up and thrown into a huge cage on a gaudily painted cart and driven down through the Shambles and Westchepe to the magistrates at the Guildhall .
10 Several transplants have been tried before , but this is the first time they have continued to function for a long period , according to the researchers at the University of Alberta , in Edmonton .
11 The shorter men were more at risk because they had less efficient lung function compared with the taller men , according to the researchers at The Royal Free Hospital , north London .
12 He says it 'll go back to the Conservatives at the next election .
13 er There 's a young girl in Didcot itself er her parents are known socially to the blokes at the fire brigade ; she , she suffers from cerebral palsy , she 's eight years old , and until recently she 's been going out on bike rides with her father on a child seat , but as you know kids grow up , they grow out of things , therefore she ca n't do it any more .
14 The brass shop was laid out with the rough brass stores on one side , whence the castings passed to the machines , thence to the benches , and from there to the polishers , next to the platers and finally to the lacquerers at the other side of the shop , each operation in turn bringing the parts further across the shop .
15 By this time the youngest member of the family , an eight-year-old boy , had got out of bed and was clinging to the bannisters at the bottom of the stairs .
16 For someone whose nature was supposed to be grasping , Nicholas was remarkably generous to the Turks at the peacemaking .
17 ‘ I 've spoken to the doctors at the hospital where he was treated , and they 've told me the whole long , miserable story .
18 And , like I said , I want to know everything you hear , what anyone 's got to say , from the pimps to the tarts through to the doormen at the clip-joints and the managers of restaurants .
19 On the trains British Rail say it 's all fine no problems East Midlands Airport it 's all fine there no delays to the services at the moment .
20 She apparently told her , contrary to the impression given in the former interview covered by Document B , that she never condoned her daughter 's going away — which she referred to rather dramatically as a ‘ kidnap ’ — that she did everything she could to bring the matter to the authorities at the time , but ‘ was prevented ’ , that she had certainly never agreed to her daughter living with her brother , that her daughter 's health had suffered alarmingly , and that she never told any social worker that she had agreed .
21 David Kennedy issued a statement to the lecturers at the School of Food and Consumer Studies , claiming that the dispute could put the school 's future in jeopardy .
22 At the 1983 Annual General Meeting Robert Naish lost his role by a substantial margin to Basil Peacock , who joined the Club as a Junior before the War , and was Secretary to the Bondholders at the time of redemption .
23 The courts have been maintained by the Club with the application of blaize to the surfaces at the beginning of each season .
24 9.6 Rights easements etc The [ operation of the Law of Property Act 1925 Section 62 shall be excluded from this Lease and the only rights granted to the Tenant are those expressly set out in this Lease [ and such further ancillary rights that arise under the general law or by necessary implication ] and the Tenant shall not by virtue of this Lease be deemed to have acquired or be entitled to and the ] Tenant shall not during the Term acquire or become entitled by any means whatever to any easement from or over or affecting any other land or Premises now or at any time after the date of this Lease belonging to the Landlord and not comprised in this Lease Section 62 of the Law of Property Act 1925 provides that a lease is deemed to include , in the absence of any contrary intention , all easements , rights and advantages appertaining or reputed to appertain to the premises at the time of the lease .
25 As you might expect from a Swedish manufacturer , the heating and ventilation are superb ; you can supply cold air to the face and warm air to the feet at the same time .
26 The consignee needed a document that justified his claim to the goods at the journey 's end and the bill of lading became such a document .
27 He returned to the Jorasses at the end of April , as soon as the méteo promised a spell of fine weather .
28 He went back to the oven and poured the remains of the Hun tun into the bowl , spooning it down quickly , then took bowls and basin outside , locking the door behind him , going to the washrooms at the far end of the corridor .
29 Later , Antonio himself declares his sexual indifference to the others at the trial in Act 4 , Scene 1 , lines 114–115 —
30 It would be only natural to suppose that this order should apply not only to the laws , but also to the conditions at the boundary of space-time that specify the initial state of the universe .
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