Example sentences of "[verb] in to the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ Any landing you walk away from is a good one , ’ she exclaimed as they taxied in to the small terminal . |
2 | At Bragança there was no response from the tower as we transmitted our intentions , landed and taxied in to the little apron . |
3 | At the end of it , just before Myeloski had given in to the rough flight conditions , Duncan had come to realize how sharp the policeman was , how through his individual approach he had put together clues that most others would have missed . |
4 | This beggar had come in to the fitting shop , corner at the back corner , where he should n't have been . |
5 | The french windows were closed and he drew his gun and peered in to the gloomy apartment . |
6 | er he wants money coming in to the central fund er if has in two years time to face a , a trial , these allegations so be it , but meanwhile he wants the money to come in to the central fund for the reason he 's outlined |
7 | We will opt in to the Social Chapter of the new European Treaty and introduce employment standards common in successful economies , including the best health and safety legislation . |
8 | I moved in to the front room where the disco had moved on to heavier metal ( New Model Army , I think — a band to watch despite their fans ) but still nobody was dancing . |
9 | She never presumed on her friendship with Eve by expecting to be let in to the inner sanctum . |
10 | That overlooks the protection that is built in to the dampened banding system . |
11 | The ‘ subjective meaning ’ of what the woodsman or marksman is doing is built in to the basic description or interpretation of the facts . |
12 | He booked in to the Inter-Continental Hotel , only a few minutes ' walk from the fairground . |
13 | Apart from these three , reports came in to the Royal Society from more than fifty other vessels , whose log-books provided a valuable source of information , particularly since officers-of-the-watch habitually keep a note of the time at which observations are made . |
14 | If she ever believed that of him , she would weaken , give in to the powerful attraction , and then she would have to admit there were emotions behind that attraction , emotions that would lead her into heartbreak . |
15 | I curled up in the shade of the parasol and tuned in to the natural static . |
16 | And when , after lunch , she came downstairs in her new outfit , bought from Selfridge 's last week with the money which J. D. O'Connor had paid her for her articles , and with her next two articles in her bag , ready to be handed in to the great man himself before she returned to the rectory to pick up Rose Bailey , whose time off did not begin until four-thirty , both Dr Neil and Matey thought that she looked enchanting . |
17 | As a consequence , petitions flowed in to the National Assembly from all the local councils in France calling for a constitutional revision , but the majority in the Assembly rejected the appeals . |
18 | Further motivation this season for student and U21 players is the possibility of a July 1993 seven match England U21 tour to Australia ; but with the U21 county and divisional matches , not to mention student representative matches and the demanding Courage League programme , to fit in to the normal season , it 's hard work being earmarked as a rugby high flier . |
19 | Thousands turn up for parties every weekend and tune in to the national radio show he does with Djaimin . |
20 | A man with black curly hair and a nose like a doorknob bustled up from his desk when Dexter walked in to the inner sanctum of the editor 's office . |
21 | She had risen this morning with the intention of going into town and meandering among the shops , perhaps treating herself to a new bonnet , or buying Cissie those pretty boots she had so admired some days ago when the two of them had walked up and down Ainsworth Street , browsing in all the shop-windows ; afterwards , Beth might have called in to the delightful tea rooms at the comer of the boulevard . |
22 | The size of the holes , and the thickness of the surrounding bubbles of enriched galaxy formation , depend on the details of the perturbations fed in to the idealised model calculations , and this offers hope that better observations of these holes in the Universe may reveal information about the kinds of disturbances that made the big bang of creation develop irregularly . |
23 | For one moment he hesitated , provoking her to give in to the gentle malice which settled inside her . |
24 | As she clenched her hands on the rail until they hurt , she fought to hate him , to make herself angry , not to give in to the terrible despair that kept threatening to overwhelm her . |
25 | Soviet spokesmen acknowledged that Washington explained the consent of Egypt , Oman , Somalia and Kenya ‘ to give in to the American military ’ by ‘ their concern for some kind of threat which allegedly comes from the decision of the Afghan leaders to rely on Soviet aid in repulsing outside intrigues ’ . |
26 | The drawing suggests how a sector of resources has been ignored and is not linked in to the over-all plan . |
27 | The function of the weaving brushes is to push the yarn into the correct position so that it is laid in to the knitted fabric . |
28 | The Free Miners of the Forest of Dean were brought in to the general election campaign today , with a warning that their livelihoods could be ruined by imports of cheap foreign coal . |
29 | er he wants money coming in to the central fund er if has in two years time to face a , a trial , these allegations so be it , but meanwhile he wants the money to come in to the central fund for the reason he 's outlined |
30 | ‘ Did you now ? ’ said Hilary , coming in to the sick bay , which was really no more than a scruffy little room with only a slight hospital smell about it to bespeak its function . |