Example sentences of "to at [art] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 How sad that Puddephat 's widow should have no one to turn to at a time like this .
2 Lear was also subject at the hands of his employer to even more glaring misacknowledgements : in what could generously be described as an insensitive oversight , four of the plates in Birds , are referred to at the bottom of the page as being ‘ drawn from Nature and on Stone by J & E Gould ’ , while the style of the bird and the signature on the drawing itself are patently Lear 's .
3 These were the two sides of the same coin which I referred to at the beginning of this essay , the nature — culture opposition and the particular characterizations and choice of emphases here explored being one explanation for the apparent gender differentials in blood within Jewish ritual practice , and one link at least between the rite of circumcision and menstrual taboo .
4 Those referred to at the beginning of this chapter , the dieters who think they ca n't shed weight on 1,000 calories a day , almost invariably belong to the can't-get-away-with-anything group and are not following the essential rules of calorie counting sufficiently strictly .
5 The " ideal " referred to at the beginning of this chapter is of marriage in which fidelity between partners is maintained from beginning to end .
6 I have also enclosed a few of the papers I referred to at the beginning of the meeting , plus a travel claim form which you are welcome to use .
7 And in fact nineteen ninety three is really something of a pivotal year because according to at the beginning of ninety three probably something like forty percent of new applications built using the client server model .
8 In those circumstances , it was hardly surprising that the judge found the two appellants in contempt and made the order referred to at the outset of this judgment .
9 Miss Ellis ' eyebrows launched into the twitchy dance they always seemed to at the mention of the words , ‘ my mother . ’
10 Looking back at these different sets of theories ( outlined in sections 5.3.2 , 5.3.3 and 5.3.4 ) , consider how each of them might explain the restructuring of local government ( discussed in Chapter 4 and referred to at the start of section 5.3 ) which took place in the 1980s ?
11 As between the two heavyweights , Reed and Pearson , Reed has been added to at the start of the period ( financed from the sale of Pearson shares ) ; the additional Reed shares were sold off in the autumn of 1991 , thereby realising a tidy profit for the Portfolio .
12 And it , they 're likely to need something like a further twenty thousand pounds er , if they do n't have sufficient funds to continue to at the balance of this financial year .
13 The words drew on his memory of a secret meeting he had gone to at the end of his first year in Glasgow .
14 A promised treat for when you get home — a cake for tea , or watching a favourite video — gives your child something to look forward to at the end of it . ’
15 We know that we still have several hours of concentrated work ahead and another meal to look forward to at the end of the working day .
16 He 'll never forgive her for the life she has spent and she wo n't let him see what she 's come to at the end of it !
17 The former is best described as a Murphy clone with answers overleaf as opposed to at the end of the book , while the latter is more of a reference rule book which offers students ‘ the 15 basic grammar rules which provide the key to using English correctly ’ .
18 In view of the widespread discussion ( and agreement ) about IT skill shortages during 1984 , it might have been reasonably expected that very high proportions of Advanced Course students would have jobs to go to at the end of their courses .
19 ‘ I just could n't stand it any more back in Bes Pelargic , ’ Twoflower went on blithely , ‘ sitting at a desk all day , just adding up columns of figures , just a pension to look forward to at the end of it … where 's the romance in that ?
20 Yet most would want to agree that such belief ought not to be contradictory in any way ( while bearing in mind the distinction between paradox and contradiction referred to at the end of Chapter 6 ) .
21 There is no doubt that it was exceptionally arduous this year , nut we did survive , whereas many of those we seek to help will not ; and whereas we had bread and cheese to fortify us and homes to return to at the end of those long days , there are millions with none of these things .
22 So there are successes in Horizons Agency , you just have to at the moment by the difficulties in finding the necessary funding to cater for people who are not great achievers in terms of output funding .
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