Example sentences of "[to-vb] [adv] at the beginning " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 A similar directive covering public works contracts over £3.5 million is scheduled to come in at the beginning of 1990 .
2 It was better to stand out at the beginning than to go in with the expectation that he would soon have to provoke a further crisis by resignation .
3 We tend to look only at the beginning and end of a decision .
4 As happens in any new venture , I discovered that the hours I had to put in at the beginning seemed to outnumber those available in any day .
5 The best way is to work out a weekly budget and avoid the temptation to splurge out at the beginning of term .
6 In fact you might say that they ought to start back at the beginning and study politics and war because , looking at the world today , maybe there are a lot more useful things to study than art and architecture .
7 Not as much as I would like to be , however , as the night class I joined in September 1991 did not have enough support to run again at the beginning of this year .
8 If we picture a vibration as a cycle , that is as equivalent to a rotation round a circle to arrive back at the beginning again , the angular distance travelled in the mathematician 's natural units is 2π .
9 I think they have to , this is why we have to get in at the beginning , and be , be part of the structure .
10 All students are required to enrol initially at the beginning of their course of study at the University , and to re-enrol annually , at the beginning of each academic year .
11 The buyer is in fact the only one in a position to begin right at the beginning , to make the preliminary inspections or surveys which should then culminate in the detailed survey at the end — the final chance to say ‘ yes ’ , ‘ no ’ or ‘ maybe ’ .
12 Places dedicated to film presentation , the penny gaffes , did start to spring up at the beginning of the new century , but it was only with the emergence of long films around 1910 that cinema acquired any sort of institutional presence in British towns .
  Next page