Example sentences of "in at the " in BNC.
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1 | The basic recipe is a reduction of white wine and brown fond de veau lié with a julienne of gherkins and mustard stirred in at the last moment . |
2 | Having saved the sports car company and turned himself in at the end of series one , Clive Owen led off the second series in 1991 completing the last days of a prison sentence and abandoning the city slicker lifestyle for a battle to save a bankrupt stately home . |
3 | The suitcases I would check in at the left-luggage office at Paddington station , the bag could come with me to Rome , and Jane could inherit all my bits and bobs . |
4 | I checked everything in at the left-luggage office in Liverpool Street station , and then went off to make a couple of telephone calls . |
5 | The damp wind blowing in at the open door made him shiver and he went to wake the others . |
6 | Brilliant light dazzled in at the left-hand window as they swept past Balnaguard , Balmacneil , Kinnaird . |
7 | More flakes sifted down like meal , sifted and sifted , drifting in at the embrasure and lying on the flagstones , unmelting . |
8 | You should be able to get copies of these codes of practice by telephoning your local British Gas office or electricity company , or by calling in at the nearest showroom . |
9 | He puts 3.3 kilos in at the start of the copper boil for Best Bitter and an additional 1.5 kilos at the end . |
10 | Let's jump in at the deep end — literally . |
11 | If you are having a mains garden lighting circuit installed , it makes sense to have power points suitable for power tools such as mowers and hedge trimmers put in at the time . |
12 | ‘ By tradition the money always comes in at the end . |
13 | The more intelligent networks will be able to recognise codes , keyed in at the telephone and will store much more data than is possible today . |
14 | Some hotshot parents cheat by calling in at the food store and ordering a gourmet prawn salad for 20 — at a cost of $60 . |
15 | I must have a look round later , maybe look in at the big house , and see what Shimi Lovat and his officers were having for dinner . |
16 | Duncan was dug in at the bottom of the orchard and had called in for a chat on his way from Brigade H.Q He was very interested in bagpipe music , having served with the Gordon Highlanders before joining the Commandos . |
17 | They were dug in at the other end of the village in an orchard very close to the enemy positions . |
18 | There were times when I was starting in at the cattle that it stood between me and the road . |
19 | The 63 was one of a handful of four-wheel-drive cars that saw brief service in 1969 before they were parked in at the end of the blind alley into which their manufacturers had ventured . |
20 | Deciding that his lead was comfortable enough to make a precautionary stop , Senna came in at the end of lap 48 . |
21 | They must have been filled in at the bank either by Mr Hatton himself or else by the cashier who was attending to him . ’ |
22 | One of the WRAC Weapons Instructors looks on as the weapons are handed in at the armoury . |
23 | In fact , it was the extra revenue she brought in at the baby end that enabled the charity to open up units for cervical cancer , and fund other research into unappealing but equally vital conditions . |
24 | Looking in at the observation ward , with its partly screened beds , she hoped that Mike Quinn — poor man — would n't take it into his head to go in a hurry . |
25 | Seen now , these early British films still have a feeling of freshness and spontaneity that derives from the natural performances of non-actors , and a loose approach to framing which allows interesting material to get in at the edge of the picture . |
26 | But more complex emotions creep in at the fringes of the tale , where the grandfather 's ostracism of the man his daughter loves leads to several fraught emotional scenes . |
27 | While there was nothing extraordinary about the goal itself , Chapman turning the ball in at the near post after Clough had driven an indirect free-kick low through a crowd of players , the circumstances in which the kick had been given were a little odd and left Everton looking apoplectic . |
28 | BA is keeping its distance from attempts by Stephen Wolf and Jay Pritzker to revive the bidding consortium , but there are still hopes in the US that it could be persuaded to step in at the last minute to add weight to a new bid . |
29 | Now the 16-year-old cat is settling in at the society 's headquarters at Chalfont St Peter , Buckinghamshire . |
30 | ‘ Otherwise , if they keep coming in at the same rate , Hong Kong will be totally swamped and will not be able to cope . |