Example sentences of "[prep] [num] pm [art] " in BNC.

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1 As the hour ticks towards 9.45 pm the final shot is recorded .
2 Finally , all is prepared and as the second hand ticks over into 8.30 pm the command ‘ Run Tape ’ is given .
3 We were on the coach until about one pm the next day .
4 If things did go wrong , especially during recording , it was counted major disaster , increasing proportionately in scale the nearer to 10.00 pm the clock ticked .
5 The most important changes , however , have resulted from the live coverage of proceedings from about 3.10 till 4.50 pm every Tuesday and Thursday and longer on some occasions .
6 On the evening of December 15 , starting at 6.30 pm , members of the institute will give demonstrations of their various techniques , and at 7.30 pm a lecture will be given by the head of the Modern British Art Department of Christie 's .
7 At 6.30 pm the tropical darkness descends — like a train going into a tunnel — and all at once the crickets begin their chorus .
8 At 4 pm the following afternoon he awoke and came downstairs asking for breakfast !
9 At 10.00 pm the Corporal came round to check that we were all present and in bed before turning the lights out and leaving us to sleep .
10 The fire was caused through the carelessness of one of the workmen in blowing out a bench lamp he had been using , and putting it in his drawer at 5.30 pm the previous night , without the fire being properly extinguished on the cotton wick .
11 The Society 's Annual Dinner will be held at the Birmingham Medical Institute , at 7.00 pm the same evening .
12 On 7 June 1953 , on the occasion of a broadcast service from Thomas Street Church at 7.45 pm a receiving set was installed in Edenderry so that the congregation there could join in the worship .
13 At 8:30 pm the parking lots outside the NT buildings on the Microsoft campus are observed to be 80% to 90% full .
14 By 5 pm the drink was consumed and the body of the kirk was getting high on the spirits !
15 Torrington 's mishandling enabled the enemy to drive a wedge between the English and Dutch ships and by 1 pm the former were in shameful retreat , a disaster only being averted when the wind suddenly dropped , though Torrington did not drop anchor until safely within the Thames .
16 By 5.30 pm the last barrowloads of whindust were laid and rolled and the job was done , apart from one set of bollards ( to stop vehicles ) which had still to be erected , and some tidying up of site .
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