Example sentences of "at [adv] [det] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It is however possible for one of their number to come back the next day and give the decision , the findings of fact and the reasons of the court , considered at rather more leisure than sometimes time will permit .
2 Perhaps it 's a matter that erm needs to be discussed at rather more length than that .
3 At 2pm that day , in the Vauxhall district of Birmingham , the scene was set for this drama .
4 At 8am each morning , the 80-odd contestants were expected to run a full marathon while it was still cool enough .
5 It stated that anyone who moved into a property valued at less that £10 a year could be sent back to the place where he or she was last legally settled if they were likely to become chargeable to the poor rates .
6 All these advantages , in a Plan affording so much cover at so little cost , add up to an outstanding — and exclusive — insurance that should n't be missed !
7 Hurt by ‘ the ungenerous treatment which I met with from that very sex whose sufferings I was at so much pains to relieve ’ , he was glad to leave Aberdeen when recalled to active duty in the Royal Navy .
8 He knew he had failed at so many things , but never as a teacher , never as that .
9 They recognised the staccato slicing of time , at so many frames per second , as an aggressive march of mechanisation .
10 At so many metres per second per second .
11 The goodwill in such cases is commonly valued at so many weeks betting receipts ( often three to four weeks ' is used ) .
12 Or worse , they have simply transposed plays and novels to the screen , producing work at so many removes from the original stimulus to creation that the prospect of the finished film having any appeal to a contemporary audience was almost non-existent .
13 Prince overflows and perforates the category of R&B at so many points , it 's barely relevant .
14 At exactly that moment Nigel , at the other end of the room , jumped to his feet and started pointing excitedly at the blackboard and screaming , ‘ The chalk !
15 Indeed , it is at exactly this stage of Picasso 's evolution that one senses behind his art the presence of this great ‘ primitive ’ who in his naiveté had unconsciously succeeded in ignoring the forces which had influenced French painting for the past fifty years , the forces against which Picasso and his friends were most immediately reacting .
16 ‘ But nobody appreciates more than me how Ian feels because I endured the same thing at exactly this time last year .
17 Absolutely , and that 's whey we 've got international agencies looking at exactly these things .
18 Education Sunday will be marked at St John 's Church at 10.30am this Sunday .
19 Stillington Special service : Education Sunday will be marked at St John 's Church at 10.30am this Sunday .
20 But at 10.30am this morning , when cars are barred entry to Skinnergate and High Row , there will still be those who say the Labour controlled council has got it wrong .
21 Among them was John Ingram , who said that he and others had been drinking with Drew at 1.35pm that lunchtime , and that Drew had mentioned going to Cross Street to get a paper .
22 All the nuclei in the body process at a , or rotate at a particular speed , according to whatever size magnetic field you put them in , and then you apply a radio frequency field to the body at the , at just that frequency , and if you tune things correctly , there is absorption of energy , and you can detect that .
23 Shouting was necessary , for it happened that a high-speed train was rushing by at just that moment on a main line to the east coast .
24 It was at just that moment the bells began .
25 But practitioners usually encounter elders at just those times when crisis has broken down the security of routine .
26 Vincent Canby in The New York Times felt that the film was often ‘ not terribly funny , at just those moments when it tries the hardest , and it sometimes wears its social concerns so blatantly that they look like warpaint ’ , but concluded that it ‘ is an important movie by one of our most interesting directors ’ .
27 He suggested that maybe the electrons were not able to orbit at just any distance from the central nucleus but only at certain specified distances .
28 The fact that other parties respond at just these code switch points suggests that they represent the boundaries of salient categories within the talk — or putting it another way , that they represent the participants ' perceptions of the relevant sections of talk which require or permit a response — even where these boundaries do not correspond with any syntactic boundary .
29 But why is this so sensitive an issue at just this point in their lives ?
30 Only Athenian citizens could profit by allotments of land as ‘ cleruchs ’ ( literally , ‘ allotment-holders ’ ) and it may be more than chance that the qualifications for Athenian citizenship are more closely defined at just this moment ( 451 ) : citizen descent was now required on both sides ( Ath .
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