Example sentences of "[noun] in [prep] the [noun] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Always put the hook in on the carriage side , knit the row and then put in the other hook .
2 The Collector had expected that the attack would begin with the howling warcry he had come to dread , but for once it did not ; out of the thin ground mist that lingered in a slight dip in between the churchyard wall and the ruins of the Cutcherry the shapes of men began to appear .
3 The duty imposed by RSC Ord 22 , r7 and CCR Ord 11 , r7 not to disclose a payment in to the trial judge until all questions of liability and damages have been decided is extended to the Court of Appeal by Ord 59 , r12A .
4 ‘ If you are putting money in to the stock market , there are other , rather more attractive , areas in which to invest , ’ one dealer added .
5 His words were the signal for Lord Hartington to send champagne in to the press room at Cheltenham , acknowledging the role of journalists in drawing attention to the problem .
6 But there are still 9 pistols untraced following the break in at the Dunmore Shooting Centre last week .
7 But there are still 9 pistols untraced following the break in at the Dunmore Shooting Centre last week .
8 It was Bailey who 'd started the fire , but Paterson who 'd helped wash Bailey 's jeans which had been stained with blood from the break in at the parachute hanger .
9 Aircraft come and go all day long ( with the exception of the afternoon 's flying display ) and moving aircraft in among the viewing public seems to be accomplished with the minimum of fuss .
10 When she reached the Watermen , Ruth wheeled Lilian in through the side door , calling , ‘ Con — we 're back ! ’
11 A hunting shark closing in for the kill homes in on the body electricity given off by its victim .
12 Everyone mucks in at the Stearsby yard , which doubles as a sheep and arable farm .
13 has become an increasingly dangerous on this right hand side I have said just now they must try and stop this coming in because he is getting some magnificent balls in to the penalty area and sooner or later they 're gon na concede a goal .
14 I came back on the Friday night and erm , well I 've packed my job in at the Transport Department , I better go down to the Recruiting Office and see what else .
15 More specifically , he puts the young reader in touch with the French impressionists in his rich illustrations for Charlotte Zolotow 's Mr Rabbit and the lovely present ( although , strangely , he says that his main influence here was the American naturalistic painter , Winslow Homer ) , and with the pop art of cinema and food packaging in In the night kitchen .
16 you see that we 're getting a lot behind that sleeper wall in between the packing line and the sleeper wall again .
17 Gatwick in on the Victoria line , offering a direct link with Hastings , and is approximately 50 miles by road .
18 However , a little later he says ‘ set the tenon gauge the same distance in from the reference plane . ’
19 It was still about half a mile in to the town centre and , apart from Nails , they all lived more than a mile out the other side .
20 Well he ate them mix the gravy in with the meat steak
21 The arguments in Beyond the Pleasure Principle which sought to establish that all organisms aim at death , a return to the state of inanimate matter , were admitted by Freud to be ones which could be overthrown by later biological research .
22 He was very conscious of the speculative status of his death instincts theory in Beyond the Pleasure Principle .
23 He 's an archetypal nice bloke who is the first to get his round in at the Blighty Bar , an after-hours drinking club which we establish on the steps of the hotel after we discover that Tokyo shuts at 10.30 .
24 People dropped all kinds of rubbish in amongst the lank grass and an old rusty car had been abandoned on a concrete platform where a garage once stood .
25 The first , short-lived erosional event ( unit II ) is represented by a small peak in in the south basin , where the accumulation rate of sediment , averaged over the relevant Thiessen polygons , was 29.213.6gm -2 yr -1 ( Table 1a ) .
26 Er Lewis and Ramprakash there , so the umpire 's view is somewhat impeded , Lawrence in from the pavilion end , bowls to , oh the full length , and he 's off the mark with four , steers that down to deep third man , there is no deep third man , and er he indulges in a little token trot to the other end , but no one was going to chase that or , or stop it by any stretch of imagination , four , the total a hundred and sixteen for three .
27 It 's , it 's living in harmony I suppose will be the word you know the , the environment sort of moves in to the power station and does n't get attacked , everywhere else gets attacked you know , people scrub up the weeds in the garden and things like that , here they 're allowed to grow , the butterflies come in , insects , great you know just , just love it .
28 The campesinos kept enough for their families ' needs over the year and handed the rest of the harvest in to the Supplies Team .
29 K. R. One night we had a strange sergeant in from the South End of the city who was filling in for our missing sergeant .
30 The next issue will hit your desks in October ( 1993 I hope ) so please put pen to paper , fingers to keyboard ( but not tipp-ex to screen I beg you ) , and get your scribblings in to the publishing team by early September ( exact date will be given soon ) .
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