Example sentences of "catch [adv prt] in [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Cords , white or beige , were worn early on in small numbers but in mid'71 black/bottle green/navy straight leg Levi cords caught on in a big way .
2 Fast on its heels came MacPublisher and Ready-Set-Go but somehow neither caught on in the same way .
3 It has yet to catch on in the Third World but when it does it could prove extremely useful .
4 Back then , they did n't catch on in a big way . ’
5 As he moved slowly at first his mouth sought first her breasts and then her lips , his breathing ragged as the pulsating , rhythmic movement quickened , echoing the rising heat in her blood , both of them caught up in a swirling vortex of emotions .
6 The two are caught up in a desperate race to save their women — knowing that the rescue of one means the destruction of the other .
7 Thus , once again , there is considerable potential for teachers to become confused between the relative demands of these two quite different approaches to moderation and caught up in a great deal of additional work .
8 The fact that Lewis did is not a sign that he was illogical , merely that he was caught up in a spiritual drama which involved more than ‘ paper logic ’ .
9 As we approach the site , coming off the freeway , we get caught up in a four mile tailback , as there 's only one entrance to the fairground .
10 Those coal heavers , weavers , sailors , labourers and others of the lower orders who took to the streets in 1768 were to a large extent caught up in a political moment which coincided with longer-running economic grievances .
11 Even if Telecom could get planning permission for its Ballsbridge site ( although it is difficult to see anyone now wanting to get caught up in a possible planning scandal on top of what has already gone down ) the development costs are going to be huge .
12 It is not merely we parliamentarians who are the victims of that haste ; local government is again caught up in a hopeless struggle against the odds .
13 It was perhaps ironic that having decided to dedicate the rest of his career to the private sector that Cuckney became caught up in a major government row when he took over as chairman of Westland Group .
14 Writing in the late 1960s and early 1970s , he argued that advanced capitalist societies were caught up in a major contradiction .
15 It may be that you have been taking them for so long that you are caught up in a chemical spiral and can not now function without them .
16 Affreca , daughter of the King of the Isle of Man , had been on her way to these shores to marry Sir John de Courcy but was caught up in a violent storm .
17 Eventually , she was caught up in a vicious cycle of bingeing and dieting — when she was depressed she ate , when she was bored she ate ; a box of cakes and half a dozen Mars bars in one session was nothing unusual .
18 Lloyd is caught up in a worldwide agreement which limits a foreign-based jockey to a 30-day stay .
19 Now John Burnett found his good-natured and impressionable son falling under the spell of two far more intelligent men of dubious opinions , and caught up in a wild scheme for emigration to America .
20 Almost inevitably the issue had become caught up in a tangled web of local education politics .
21 Women in Hinduism are caught up in a paradoxical view of the female , where the divine can be feminine , yet women are profoundly mistrusted .
22 What I shall want to argue is that their position is caught up in a circular argument : the only reason one could have for wanting to stand in this kind of relationship to biblical women is that one is Christian , but these writers never tackle the prior question as to whether feminism is in fact compatible with Christianity , such that one should want to stand in relationship to biblical women .
23 Sadly , teachers too are sometimes caught up in a competitive assessment system — perhaps even as beneficiaries .
24 Indeed , she believes that she is caught up in a bureaucratic cage , the different branches of the council being in league with local and national branches of other sections of the state apparatus .
25 There is now a widespread view that trade unionism is caught up in a fundamental transformation .
26 The police and the Army were caught up in a public order crisis which continues to plague us and which has given rise to the most damaging terrorist campaign .
27 Brown , a former member of hit teen band New Edition , fears he has been caught up in a long-running feud between his former band 's road crew and one of America 's top street gangs .
28 Her eyes filled with tears , but she made no attempt to blink them away , too caught up in an internal struggle which she knew could determine her life forever after .
29 Having passed from the Mediterranean to the Indus without attracting the attention of a single government official , Battuta , like so many subsequent travellers , crossed the Indian frontier only to find himself caught up in an impenetrable web of bureaucracy : no sooner had they set foot on the east bank of the Indus than intelligence officials ‘ wrote to Delhi informing the king of our arrival and giving him all the details concerning us . ’
30 Positivists , of all varieties , have consequently been caught up in an endless quest for a universal , objective but non-legal concept of ‘ crime ’ .
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