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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 At the nick he found a reception committee from the press .
2 ( The trouble with that was that so many All Blacks and Springboks and older British Internationals were at the University he would be better advised to wait a year or two . )
3 the facts known to the employee at the date he received the letter ;
4 Thus Castro was in dire need of a Soviet commitment to preserve his revolution , and in a speech given to the United Nations on 26 September 1960 the Cuban leader may have been hinting at the price he might have been willing to pay when he said , ‘ We understand how terrible the subordination of the economy and life in general of nations to foreign economic power is .
5 He sold it in no time — at the price he originally wanted .
6 he used an illustration of the pig , you know you can polish the pig up , you can clean it , you can scrub it , you can oh de cologne it , you can do all sorts of things with it , you can tie a nice pink ribbon around it and you can put it in a palace , but it 's still a pig and it lives like a pig and you can cl and no matter how clean you 've made it , it 'll soon find some dirt to wallow in and the ribbon might make it look nice in the show ground but it does n't make any difference to its nature and so it is with us and so Jesus did n't start on the outside , but he starts at the inside he deals with the route of the problem , in One Corinthians chapter fifteen and in verse three it says for I deliver to you as a first importance , this is the basic thing , he says to them this was the first thing that I said to you because it was the most important that Christ died for our sins , according to the scripture , what ever else Christ gives to us , what ever else he does for us , what ever else the gospel produces , the basic , the most important , the fundamental thing is that Christ died for our sins .
7 Cullam stood by the window , staring fixedly now at the road he had trodden with Hatton and Pertwee .
8 And a call … ’ he wiped his hand across his face , looking down at the moisture he rubbed off and laughing almost ironically .
9 He felt a tugging at the case he was holding , and it was the porter , trying to take it from him .
10 Blanche could imagine her weeping with her son over his confession but , like Marek , she was a little puzzled that Tatyana had not shown even a spark of joy at the revenge he had taken .
11 Look at the stuff he 's holding on to : he is n't selling any of his great Minimal works , his Carl Andres or Donald Judds , but those are works that are still climbing in value . ’
12 ‘ I 've got something on my mind , ’ he said sharply , sipping at the drink he cradled in his hand .
13 Here is an American artist writing about his dismay at the work he saw at Paris in 1831 :
14 But if you just looked at the work he 's been churning out lately , without knowing anything about his business activities , you 'd wonder what had happened to him .
15 Next morning the humour in this wore decidedly thin , as Marshall in particular sent down bouncer after bouncer , unchecked by umpire Constant and apparently unconcerned at the damage he might do — such as badly bruising Fowler 's arm and causing him to retire for a while .
16 At the top he stopped , brought to a halt by the sight of his mother entering her room .
17 At the top he 'll turn you into the wind , count to three and you 're off .
18 At the top he said :
19 When at the top he was disappointed to find no flag , but with some cautious experimentation discovered that he did not need to hold on to the pole — he could float .
20 After a short wait he climbed the stairs and at the top he called again .
21 So he said , well they have a grill at the top he says , so if you 're cooking a chicken instead of it coming out pale th the grill will come on and it will brown it
22 When he removed the crates to get at the tarpaulin he realized it was covering something , further stimulating his interest .
23 Not so ! always said that he had enjoyed his time at Kirkcaldy and at the lunch he underlined that sentiment .
24 I remember after that first night at the Hall he said there was something unnerving about you . ’
25 After another spell at the Treasury he returned to Downing Street in 1982 , spending three years as Mrs Thatcher 's Principal Private Secretary , where his ‘ Rolls-Royce mind ’ impressed many .
26 In the year and a half he has been at the Lyric he has established himself as something of a ‘ character ’ and has chalked up a number of box office successes .
27 He gazed again at the madonna he had sat beside when her child was just born .
28 Complementing the Dieppe exhibition at the Museum he joins folk/rock guitarist and composer Andy Roberts for a modern celebration of Normandy .
29 A : to give him and he was writing just at the beginning he was — writing the whole — for each year of his life he wrote something in that had — had been invented or +
30 and yet at the beginning he said the king said we do n't want you to go back to school , it sounds funny
  Next page