Example sentences of "[noun] [be] [verb] in for the " in BNC.

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1 Does the hon. Gentleman accept that , if he is as keen as I am to provide a level playing field for road and rail , he should recognise that , when motorways were built around Greater Manchester , of three footpaths that crossed the motorway , one was closed or diverted and bridges or underpasses were put in for the other two .
2 So all the excavations are filled in for the sake of tidiness , and all the bolt-holes and entrance holes are filled in to help assess what 's been left .
3 This kick is especially useful when a fighter has been knocked to the ground and his opponent is closing in for the kill , although in training it is learned from a standing position .
4 Let's get inside , the rain 's set in for the day . ’
5 As I left the next shift was settling in for the day , writing up diaries , reading novels and brewing up endless cups of tea .
6 Her poor academic record was traded in for the sharpest of wits , her gaucherie for poise .
7 Northumbrian villages , though protected to some extent by castles and garrisons such as those at Carlisle , Naworth , Harbottle and Norham , tended to be built in a sort of miniature bailey around a large square green which could be gated when cattle were brought in for the night .
8 Patients were flocking in for the new treatment .
9 Both players were brought in for the last six weeks of the season as McHale began to look ahead to next season when the Seasiders hope to mount a serious promotion push .
10 Now the old man 's moving in for the kill , thought Paul Lane , with an anticipatory flash of excitement .
11 Eventually , on Feb. 23 , a non-Congress ( I ) government was sworn in for the first time in 10 years .
12 Those worth £5 — £19 were roped in for the second loan , in 1523 , so paying a total of 15 per cent , not so very much less than what was expected of the £20 men , and of course a proportionately heavier burden .
13 We have high and growing unemployment , and under those policies that high unemployment is built in for the whole of the 1990s , along with recession and slow growth .
14 Core workers at Bhilai have regular employment , but for those on the periphery and in support industries , the work is casual , dangerous and ill-paid : factories , where women are locked in for the night ; opencast iron-ore mines where workers ' deaths by rock-falls are concealed by unscrupulous owners .
15 A party from Wick High School were booked in for the weekend .
16 Banners , pamphlets and boxes being carried in for the start of fresher 's fair .
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