Example sentences of "[verb] in and [verb] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 At that moment Mauleverer tottered in and made for the armchair beside the fire .
2 Later the wolf would be cut open while she was asleep , filled up with heavy stones once the little pigs had scrabbled out of her , stitched up again by the woodcutter ; and then she would be driven by thirst to the river , would topple in and drown with the weight of the stones .
3 Mothers kept their children away from us , and were grateful when we had checked in and gone for a coffee .
4 He made sure they were both tucked in and went to the door .
5 The student will develop the skills and knowledge required to process client requirements for air travel sold in and ticketed in the UK for journeys both within the UK and originating from the UK ( SITI ) .
6 It meant his leg was all skewed in and pushed against the other one .
7 Schellenberg told Rossman to go in and walked along the corridor .
8 fancy let to go in and mix with the grouting , its a bit of a cheek in it ?
9 Before anyone goes in and sits on the dentist 's chair which forms the centrepiece of the cage , Dr Tydeman will first monitor them using some external equipment .
10 Because I felt extremely low , and needed company , I telephoned Esme on Wednesday evening , the day Father died , to ask if she would come out for a canoe ride from the Aquatic Club to River Park , but she said she must stay in and practise for a forthcoming piano recital .
11 In the cases that I have mentioned everything is in order — all the forms have been filled in and returned by the contractor , the work has been completed satisfactorily — but it is a long time before the cheque is processed and the contractor paid .
12 The 15-acre Herculaneum Dock , two miles from Liverpool city centre , was filled in and reclaimed for the International Garden Festival .
13 ‘ But after he sat down and thought about it he has come in and apologised to the lads and realised he maybe should not have said it .
14 Later Beatrice was carried in and laid on the sofa , sobered by the experience , her breasts daubed in blood .
15 At the end of the last series , presenter Gordon Burns invited anyone who was interested in taking part to write in and ask for a place — and Paul was among the 8,000 who applied .
16 Without the slightest hesitation , he took two hops to the water , waded in and swam across the deep , still pool .
17 Artificial granules were collected by centrifugation ( 33,000 g ) , resuspended in and examined in a NMR tube containing a -benzene capillary .
18 It is one of those inexplicable events that a rabbit hole in the middle of a field can be gassed and its population exterminated , the hole filled in and cultivated over the top , yet , even after the passage of a number of years , a rabbit will go to that exact location and restore the old system .
19 But after he sat down and thought about it he came in and apologised to the lads . ’
20 All the windows were broken and came in and landed on the people working . ’
21 A Japanese man came in and asked about the china ducks .
22 Jamie came in and sat on the couch next to my chair .
23 Sister Cooney came in and snapped on the light .
24 Bartlemas and O'Rourke came in and talked about the first night of Gielgud 's Prospero ( ‘ Doing it again , dear ’ at the National .
25 ‘ A monkey came in and perched on a table .
26 A third-year nurse came in and turned on the radio .
27 We want access to the same range of opportunities to participate in and contribute to the society in which we live .
28 That was a great cross by , did absolut did absolutely magnificent , he controlled the ball he turned left footed shot in and hit against the post , very very unfortunate fo for Blackburn but then I suppose Shrewsbury deserve a little bit of luck .
29 The book should have been in Tollemarche 's only bookstore for several weeks ; however , when Hank casually sauntered in and asked for a copy , old Mr Pascall said it had not arrived .
30 The concept , as employed by orthodox Marxism , goes from the singular to the universal and therefore , Sartre claims , detotalizes in a movement of ‘ decompressive expansion ’ , whereas incarnation involves ‘ a way of totalizing compression which , on the contrary , seizes the centripetal movement of all the significations drawn in and condensed in the event or in the object ’ ( II , 59 ) .
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