Example sentences of "all at [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It 's all at a price , however .
2 One of the best ways of deciding which floorcovering to use where is to work around the house , thinking about what each room will need for the best combination of looks , durability , ease of cleaning and comfort , all at a price you can afford .
3 By redirecting services to fully populated areas , the city could provide services for all at a cost it could afford .
4 The availability of this badge to all at a cost of 6d was widely advertised and nearly ten thousand were sold .
5 We were all at a party at Mr Midwinter 's .
6 He presented ‘ … a very gloomy picture of adult education in this county … ’ : the number of classes had declined from thirty-five in 1937–38 to twenty-five in 1938- 39 and the number of enrolled students had fallen by some 30% , and all at a time when activity in other counties was increasing significantly .
7 It is suggested above that no public library can satisfy demand for all these types of material — least of all at a time of diminishing resources .
8 Had I known that he intended to throw his claim to the leadership into the ring within a matter of hours , I would have tried to dissuade him from it then and there , for people never like being bounced , and least of all at a time of emotional stress .
9 In a machine operating at 6000 stitches per minute , the needle thread has to accelerate to a speed close to 100 mph ( 160kph ) , stop , and accelerate backwards to the same speed , and all at a cycle rate of up to 100 times per second !
10 The British , U.S. and Dutch arts-funding bodies all at a crossroads
11 impeccable boots , all at an angle
12 He said : ‘ It 's probably the most worrying threat of all at the minute and we have to find it .
13 A particular research project that I and two colleagues , Keith Baker and Erin Sloman , have a grant from the Science Research Council for is to look first of all at the problems of getting such as system with , well at the moment three but possibly up to twelve computers , working on a given existing artificial intelligence problem to see how to take this big program — it 's called Popeye — it 's a research project to study various areas of visual perception , as you say — to see how to break this down and have it running simultaneously on a number of much smaller computers , rather than on the single big computer that it 's running on at the moment .
14 Racial discrimination was abhorrent to all at the CLE .
15 your sugar was all at the bottom of your cup then
16 They 're probably all at the bottom .
17 They are probably all at the bottom .
18 It 's all at the bottom
19 It could be suggested that my argument has merit in relation to undergraduate education , but that it makes no sense at all at the level of postgraduate education .
20 The work reported in this thesis was sponsored by General Accident Fire and Life Assurance Corporation plc and carried out at the Medical Research Council 's Applied Psychology Unit in Cambridge and I thank Alan Baddeley and all at the unit for making the work possible .
21 Send that to all at the Crosskeys at , the Chester your worships .
22 it 's all at the back
23 oh your fuse is all at the back the
24 But the Burgermeister , usually so jovial and noisy , had proved to be exceedingly sound , never saying anything at all at the rehearsal other than to praise the faint-hearted at the very end .
25 We are all at the mercy of these machines , which few people understand and nobody can control .
26 They were extravagantly to his advantage , save when she lowered her voice to sigh , tapping her left side familiarly : " And all overclouded by this , you know — all at the mercy of a weakness — ( 9 ) Pemberton gathered that the weakness was in the region of the heart ( 10 ) .
27 For example , Mrs Moreen 's remark " And all overclouded by this , you know- all at the mercy of a weakness " ( 9 ) has the anaphoric repetition of all at the beginning of successive clauses , and has two banal colloquial metaphors in the expressions " overclouded " and " at the mercy of " .
28 We looked first of all at the relationship of grammar to discourse and the extent to which formal cohesive ties operate across sentence boundaries .
29 As the sky slowly brightened and they waited , Fleury thought of how he and Harry had waited for the first attack of all at the beginning of June .
30 For example , Mrs Moreen 's remark " And all overclouded by this , you know- all at the mercy of a weakness " ( 9 ) has the anaphoric repetition of all at the beginning of successive clauses , and has two banal colloquial metaphors in the expressions " overclouded " and " at the mercy of " .
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