Example sentences of "again at the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | With guests including Opera Restor 'd , Musica Antiqua of London and the American ensemble The Musicians of Swanne Alley running alongside events for children , illustrated lectures , walks , talks and afternoon tea concerts , there will be something for you once again at the 1992 Festival . |
2 | We meet again at the kneeling place |
3 | I glance once again at the Dutch movie . |
4 | But when I looked again at the taut group riveted to the game , now not even speaking , I had my doubts . |
5 | I would have liked to have heard it again at the second service but Dad made us hurry home . |
6 | It still ran away from him but he grabbed it again at the second attempt before it went over the line and the chance had gone . |
7 | We therefore found it necessary to look again at the empirical evidence about what goes on in the nuclear family — Who has the power ? |
8 | Lt. Mikhail Vologsky stared again at the buff-coloured application form , so meticulously filled out , and so callously rejected . |
9 | She looked again at the tiny hut . |
10 | ‘ I should have said no , ’ she muttered , looking yet again at the tiny pile of things she had accumulated . |
11 | She came full circle around the house , and opened a door to find herself looking up again at the dangling corpse statue . |
12 | She gazed again at the peaceful scene in front of her until her eyes rested on an old Severn Punt lying high and dry on the foreshore . |
13 | In June 1917 his paintings were on exhibition again at the improvised gallery in the Rue Huyghens , where Modigliani , Kisling and Zadkine each had a wall with their works displayed . |
14 | With difficulty she stared up again at the unreachable sky beyond the bars and wire mesh of her cage and though she tried to say more she was unable to , for her wings sagged ever more weakly and she seemed barely able to hold up her head . |
15 | His room in Leeds was with a Mrs Hubble at 21 Ladysmith Road , and on the return journey he had stopped only once and again at the Merrie England . |
16 | She looked again at the rear-view mirror and saw that the Audi was turning into a side road , allowing her to go . |
17 | We opt for The Baker 's Wife at the Phoenix and all vote it a definite winner , and I wonder again at the jaundiced palate of critics who gave it a fair old drubbing when it first trotted out . |
18 | She looked again at the small girl with bright eyes standing beside her desk so sensible and solemn . |
19 | Sam looked again at the dark smudges of exhaustion under Clare 's eyes . |
20 | The Clinton administration is said to be looking again at the tangible objectives underlying the federal government 's support for research ( see page 776 ) , while the British government , in the shape of the Department of Trade and Industry , is seeking a more direct ( if a more avuncular than the American ) role in fostering industrial competitiveness . |
21 | And Post Office United will be in action again at the Junior Stadium , Sydenham on Tuesday September 14 , when they take on Belfast Amazons for the Premier Cup . |
22 | And Post Office United will be in action again at the Junior Stadium , Sydenham on Tuesday September 14 , when they take on Belfast Amazons for the Premier Cup . |
23 | Then he looked back again at the blinding quayside . |
24 | But let us look again at the quirky , fortuitous way in which evolution favours particular phenotypes . |
25 | Doing that , we look again at the relevant words . |
26 | The Secretary of State has said several times today how proud he is of British Rail 's safety record — a pride which we all share — but that is surely no reason not to look again at the real doubts that have arisen in the past year about manning , the number of hours worked and the quality of some of the new systems of signalling that are being installed . |
27 | Marjorie smiled again at the other woman . |
28 | The O'Neil double-act started up again at the other end of the church , Denis responding to Paddy . |
29 | It was to be nine months before we finally emerged again at the other end of the archipelago — shocked , emaciated , but exalted . |
30 | Until it 's completely perfected we 'd rather keep it quiet , ’ the Governor said , glaring once again at the other man . |