Example sentences of "in with the " in BNC.

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1 We 've plunged in with the practical details rather than training itself .
2 In many cases this has resulted in the introduction of faked features and the associated destruction of existing features which , though often of architectural and historic interest in their own right , do not fit in with the designer 's concept of the pub 's ideal form .
3 Another key difference between styles is in heat control , inextricably tied in with the equipment used .
4 John and I got on — and I was happy to join in with the general ‘ Sarah 's being difficult ’ refrain .
5 The day after , Jamie came in with the wooden dish of porridge , held it out to Cameron , then twitched it away when he reached for it and turned it upside down .
6 When Jamie came in with the food at gloaming , Cameron asked him for another blanket .
7 ‘ My Princess Harriet , ’ said Daddy , yes he did , as they paraded in with the silver tea things and the three dead-at-birth jam tarts .
8 Many areas have special schemes which fit in with the particular needs of individual people at home .
9 These services were brought in with the May 1983 timetable to improve the range the Trans–Pennine trains on offer .
10 To tie in with the new broadcasting levy system , which starts in January , HTV is changing its year end from July to December .
11 Atkinson ( the manager ) says his bottom-of-the-table team were so bad in one of the five defeats they have suffered in eight First Division games that he found himself joining in with the cries for his dismissal .
12 Tied in with the management charges , the company launched a four-for-five deep discount rights issue to raise £1.2m and recapitalise Ross .
13 It is likely that Unit will want to acquire more engineering interests to tie in with the Surrey business .
14 Meanwhile Jackson himself , a gangly six foot four , with a hairline not so much receding as speeding flat out towards his neck , was easily slotted in with the other unlikely pop stars , taking their surly revenge on the conventional way of doing things .
15 Together they were the opposite of women who will nod and nod as they pretend to listen to another , waiting for the first pause of breath to muscle in with the growing pains and glories of their own house , the impatience showing on their faces as they wait .
16 It 's back in its box now , but it 's still pretty big — so I have to stick it in with the dirty washing .
17 Playboy Warren Beatty homes in with the dryer on Julie Christie in the film Shampoo .
18 But the job of captain remains the same : you have to work in with the coaches , motivate the players and gain their respect .
19 Sixthly , how would the possible creation of such a German unity fit in with the Helsinki process , and would it promote a constructive evolution of that process in the direction of ending the division of Europe and progressing toward integrated legal , economic , ecological , cultural , and information environments in Europe ?
20 How would a united Germany fit in with the attempt through the Helsinki process to end the division of Europe ? ; and , would the new Germany take into account the interests of others in concluding a European peace settlement ?
21 But he returned to Grenada to throw his lot in with the mostly light-skinned urban middle class to which he only half belonged .
22 We could see that the health of the person is directly tied in with the health of the planet . ’
23 He added : ‘ I qualified in 1948 and came in with the health service .
24 Miss J. has pretty well run him and now he 's doing a roaring trade and has just married a daughter of Lord Lytton , he 's evidently right in with the right lot of people … and what a God 's mercy that for once in a way these people have got hold of the right man and what a thing for England . ’
25 Other oddities creep in with the attempt to harmonise plurals of French compound words .
26 So they have to make a choice : should they stay Japanese , or try to blend in with the locals ?
27 Locke 's particular interest in religious and moral knowledge , and his more general interest in knowledge as such , falls in with the widespread concern with such matters which was consequent on the sixteenth-century rediscovery of ancient Greek scepticism .
28 In just over an hour he took five wickets , Ambrose chipped in with the other two , and England were all out for 93 .
29 Only a party bigot would claim that they had somehow come in with the Conservative Government three years earlier .
30 Look at the words of the hymns , glance at the dates and link them in with the theories we have discussed , and I can promise you that it will all make a little more sense and make it even more evident how our hymn-writers wrestled with the meaning of the cross .
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