Example sentences of "[verb] [verb] [adv prt] in [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Well you do n't want to go out in the car so stop and do a bit of painting .
2 Course it worried Ange look cos she do n't want to go back in the office like last time .
3 When the doctor had gone , Dot said , ‘ I got to go back in the hospital , ai n't I , Mrs H ? ’
4 It 's reassuring to know that even beautiful actresses worry about what they 're gong to wear to go out in the evening .
5 Unfortunately my original Precision got ripped off in a place called Redondo Beach .
6 I had arranged to go out in a crab boat to get JTR 's coastal sketches .
7 One retired to Beirut after going bankrupt , one got mixed up in a betting scandal , and the third was convicted of tax-dodging .
8 Kenneth Clarke watched from the window as the police got mixed up in the brawl .
9 It has its new smell still — the perfect red plastic smell , the smell of writing numbers in arithmetic books ruled in squares ; the smell it had before it got mixed up in the dust and plasticine and tangled electric flex in the toy drawer .
10 You do not want to find out in the interview itself that the skirt rides up disconcertingly high when you sit down or that the front gapes open when you lean forward to talk .
11 ‘ We 're prepared to accept that you just got caught up in a drug bust .
12 It appears that the Airborne and Commandos got caught up in the shelling and suffered casualties , dead and wounded . ’
13 Another man , a social worker got caught up in the melee and was forced out of another car , but police released him when they realized he was not connected .
14 Another man , a social worker , got caught up in the melee and was forced out of another car , but police released him when they realized he was not connected .
15 His parents , who live at Clevelys , near Blackpool , feared he had strayed outside the airport and got caught up in the disaster .
16 You said you got caught up in the fighting , my husband Michael said he 'd love to hear more about that .
17 His horse , Travel Over , got caught up in the tape at the second false start and came back from Aintree lame .
18 In another incident , workers became caught up in a forest of 50 metre-deep piles supporting a fourstorey office block in Park Lane .
19 A strange feeling of expectation mixed with our fear as we became caught up in the thrill of the hunt .
20 She sits curled up in the corner of the sofa with her feet tucked under her and her half-written letter to her cousin waiting in her lap .
21 Nearly all children want to go out in the snow and , if they are suitably dressed , they can have many mathematically rewarding experiences as well as lots of fun .
22 While skirmishing has started in the Senate , which will not consider the economic plan for a few weeks , something like open warfare has broken out in the House .
23 Violent rioting has broken out in the camps many times in recent weeks .
24 Anyone whose car has broken down in the middle of nowhere will appreciate the value of belonging to a motoring organisation that 'll come to the rescue at any time of the day or night .
25 Speaking after delivering an emotional tribute to his party workers , he said : ‘ There 's a great deal of serious reflection that has to go on in the opposition parties , but I 've no doubt that most of the reflection has to take place within Labour and it has to take place on the subject of PR .
26 Speaking after delivering an emotional tribute to his party workers , he said : ‘ There 's a great deal of serious reflection that has to go on in the opposition parties , but I 've no doubt that most of the reflection has to take place within Labour and it has to take place on the subject of PR .
27 Despite being part of a happy close-knit Jewish family , Alison could n't wait to go out in the world to do her own thing .
28 As Dr Geoffrey Tresise , Keeper of Geology , Merseyside County Museum , has pointed out in a series of articles for the trade magazine Wine & Spirit , there is no physical or chemical property of Belemnite chalk which makes it either superior or inferior to Micraster for viticultural purposes and the grand cru towns of the northerly Montagne adequately demonstrate this .
29 Peter Daley of Waste Management International has pointed out in a lecture to Britain 's Royal Academy of Engineering that landfills , at the present rate of waste generation in Europe , use about two square metres of land per person per century .
30 The right hon. Gentleman has pointed out in the House that nearly 50 per cent .
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