Example sentences of "[verb] in for [art] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Only got in for a few minutes as half the church was there . |
2 | Take this tiny sample : Leopold Bloom , the Dublin Jew , with his touching mixture of timorousness and courage , has looked in for a few moments at a church as a Mass is ending . |
3 | Orders are already pouring in for the American-made scarves and bandanas that heat up when a liquid-filled pad is microwaved is placed into a pouch . |
4 | I am bound to say My Lords that my own view is still that the size within the limits laid down by statute with a minimum of sixteen or eighteen and maximum of twenty-four would best be determined locally and if we 're not going in for a national police force , I still ca n't see what it has to do with the Secretary of State and why the Home Office should be settling the size of forty-three or so police authorities . |
5 | We sailed into a murky , airless dawn veiled by the thin drizzle of a Scotch Mist , and I turned in for a few hours . |
6 | Contentedly I went below and turned in for a few hours , leaving my colleague to navigate . |
7 | Ramesh K was then brought in for a few minutes . |
8 | After the fish had settled in for a few days , one that I had thought to be a male showed signs of filling eggs , and developed a bright yellow patch on her belly . |
9 | I 've only popped in for a few minutes . |
10 | If you look at the people who went in for the Olympic Games , right up to the Second World War , erm you would call them amateurs . |
11 | I kept just killing time until it had gone eleven o'clock and all the cinema-goers had gone in for the late shows , at which point I decided to call it a day . |
12 | At the present pace of progress in Brussels , similar changes throughout the EC may not come in for a dozen years or more , and British farmers fear that they will lose business while waiting for European competitors to catch up . |
13 | Do you think I might come in for a few minutes and talk to you about Matilda ? ’ |
14 | Andy had n't meant any more than his pressing need to stay in for a few weeks till he had made more headway with his revision . |
15 | Even so , it was not unusual for friends and kinsmen to drop in for a few minutes , an hour , to see the news or a comedy . |
16 | After the news of the secret negotiations between the government , Leyland Vehicles and GM broke in February 1986 , the government allowed alternative bids to be put in for the different parts of the firm . |
17 | I 've radioed in for the Social Services , they 'll find them some alternative accommodation . |