arrive+at
41arrive — [c]/əˈraɪv / (say uh ruyv) verb (arrived, arriving) –verb (i) 1. to come to a certain point in the course of travel; reach one s destination: *I … arrived at the gate just in time to run into Annie and Jessie –frank dalby davison, 1965. 2. to… …
42arrive — /ə raɪv/ verb to reach a place ● The consignment has still not arrived. ● The shipment arrived without any documentation. ● The plane arrives in Sydney at 04.00. ● The train leaves Paris at 09.20 and arrives at Bordeaux two hours later. (NOTE:… …
43arrive — see it is better to travel hopefully than to arrive …
44arrive — [13] When speakers of early Middle English ‘arrived’, what they were literally doing was coming to shore after a voyage. For arrive was originally a Vulgar Latin compound verb based on the Latin noun rīpa ‘shore, river bank’ (as in the English… …
45Arrive-avant — Arrivé avant La relation arrivé avant (anglais happened before), notée , est un ordre partiel (relation binaire irréflexive, antisymétrique et transitive) sur les évènements basé sur la causalité de deux évènements dans un système distribué… …
46arrive at something — arrive at (something) to come to a decision or agreement about something after serious thought or discussion. The town council needs to explain how they arrived at their plan for future development of the town. Etymology: based on the literal… …
47Arrive Alive — is the title of an unfinished comedy film starring Willem Dafoe and Joan Cusack, directed by Jeremiah S. Chechik and produced by Art Linson. Considered a very funny original screenplay, the story concerns a hotel manager (Dafoe) and his… …
48arrive at a conclusion — index arbitrate (adjudge), ascertain, deduce, deduct (conclude by reasoning), determine, find (determine) …
49arrive at a decision — index resolve (decide) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
50arrive at a judgment — index decide Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …