Example sentences of "[noun] [verb] in at the [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Should be a few goals going in at the Baseball Ground on Sunday … the central live match is Derby County against Oxford United … |
2 | Fortinbras coming in at the end , when Hamlet 's dead and everyone 's dead . |
3 | He grabbed Joseph roughly by the shoulder as the boy peered in at the window , and pulled him away . |
4 | In the morning the sun came in at the window and woke me . |
5 | Mercer used his pace in the second half to get in at the corner after Harmon 's effort and Forster scored after a quick-witted kick by Turner , who also kicked five goals . |
6 | Two riders turned in at the approach to the castle , the rest of the cavalcade swept onward through the gate , flung open to give them passage , and vanished in a flurry of spume and fine mud along the foregate . |
7 | If you go on holiday for a month , you want another pay cheque going in at the end of the month . |
8 | When the tax came in at the beginning of 1863 , vodka became cheaper and more readily available , state revenues held up , and the former monopolists of the retail trade began to invest their accumulated capital in railways , banks and mines . |
9 | 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 . |
10 | It was almost time for Compline when Cadfael came from the gardens after his last round of the evening , and saw horsemen riding in at the gate . |
11 | I saw Sybil on ‘ Top of the Pops ’ the day before I started work on the book and she was wearing a gold bra top , huge fake-gold earrings and black trousers pulled in at the waist . |
12 | I use it for a wide sleeve gathered in at the bottom and I have knitted the main part of the garment with a 2x1 welt . |
13 | like Jimmy next door , he 's always dropping off and he got a vent put in at the bottom of his door , they took the pipe out and behind you had a big open |
14 | I wanted the sleeves to be semi-full , with the ease taken in at the wrist . |
15 | Nerina called in at the office to see her mother . |
16 | It all started early this morning , when a rather anxious mum called in at the office . |
17 | Mr Bates hopes to finalise a deal that will reduce his payment from the asking price of £22.85 million to £13 million — and mean Fulham moving in at the end of this season . |
18 | However some water got in at the front . |
19 | ‘ Did you get a chance to look in at the side studio , when they were there last Friday ? |
20 | The jacket of the suit curved in at the waist and at the back were two buttons above a pair of tails . |
21 | Quite suddenly Tweed pulled in at the kerb before they reached the hotel . |
22 | The changes in legislation have been dramatic since the mid-eighties the majority of changes coming in at the beginning of nineteen ninety three with the E C directives . |
23 | ‘ As I hold a season ticket I had no occasion to call in at the booking office . |
24 | A dish he calls Maltese curry — an unlikely and most interesting mixture of onions , tomatoes and fruit with eggs mixed in at the end of the cooking , rather in the pipérade manner — was another recipe he repeated in several of his books . |
25 | Each time you fill the bath , the water flows in at the rate of 15 litres per minute through the cold tap and 12 litres per minute through the hot tap ( when they are fully turned on ) . |
26 | I have heard that even if they lose 15 per cent of the money coming in at the moment , some of them could fold . |
27 | A person of ‘ quality ’ — such as a member of the landed gentry or the clergy — would be at the top of their scale , commanding a funeral similar to that organized by the College of Arms for a knight bachelor , with paupers and wayfarers coming in at the bottom . |
28 | Chill dread settled in at the base of her skull and directed the activities of her roiling stomach , as she tried in vain to move her mouth , or even blink . |
29 | The fifteenth hole is short but dangerous ; its plateau green is ringed by bunkers at the front and sides and the trees press in at the back in a claustrophobic way — a nightmarish hole if you are playing badly . |
30 | In the main gatehouse tower on the first stack , Moray was asking of the guard-captain whether the Countess was at home when the door from the first of the bridge-corridors was flung open and a young woman came in at the run , hair blown , laughing-eyed , skirts kilted up the better to run , fine bosom tumultuous — as unusual a Countess of Dunbar and March as was the castle of which she was chatelaine . |