Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] in [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | One of my other SCOTTISH OFFICE contacts has asked me to go in for a sandwich lunch on Wednesday ( 25th ) , which is kind . |
2 | ‘ Does Faye … or Dr Greene … want me to go in to the hospital ? ’ |
3 | But today there was the picnic , and who could tell what would happen once the four of them got in amongst the pine coverts of Ham Park . |
4 | In their early twenties they had a group called the Actors and RCA records asked them to come in for a meeting . |
5 | ‘ Someone got in from the sea-wall . |
6 | That 's basically when I got in with a guy in Memphis and we started Fernwood Records , and I got interested in the engineering side of it . |
7 | In the end , I got in through a hole in the side , but it was n't easy . |
8 | ‘ I came to wake you , and I got in through the bathroom , which you forgot to lock . ’ |
9 | I got in through the back gate without being challenged . |
10 | I did go out with one of me mates once and he was going burgling and I needed to do one 'cos I had no money or nothing , strung out , and he went to the Old Hall Estate and broke into a house and I got in through the window with him and I just looked around and saw all these photographs of , y'know like , the family that lived there with the kids and that and I just got this horrible feeling , so I just got out the window and walked away , even though I was strung out and I did n't pick nothing up , I just left him to it ‘ cos , like , though all the burglaries I 'd done , they 'd all been shops . |
11 | When I got in from the airport — yesterday , give or take a week — the flat felt lightly dishevelled , hurriedly lived-in , as if the cleaning-lady 's efforts had been briskly cancelled or mussed . |
12 | Until I moved in to the Rectory at Seend , I lived briefly at the Bell Inn , St Edith 's Marsh , Bromham , near Devizes . |
13 | I charged in like a bull . |
14 | ‘ Now , it 's not unusual for someone to come in off the street and tell us they owe a million . ’ |
15 | When I saw the next auberge coming up , I drew in to the side of the road , put on my raincoat , and walked along to it . |
16 | The door opened , and someone came in from the night . |
17 | ‘ I came in for a lot of criticism but I know in my heart that the good things I did there were very conveniently swept under the carpet at the time . ’ |
18 | ‘ I came in for a lot of adulation during my racing days — groupies . |
19 | ‘ I came in through the door . ’ |
20 | On Saturday 4 June , I came in from a morning 's canvassing in Sutton Coldfield to find an urgent message to call Conservative Central Office . |
21 | Then , in the afternoon , I came in from the garden and found her in an armchair , engrossed in a thick , glossy-looking book . |
22 | I came in by the south door as usual and locked both it and the door in the grille after me . |
23 | I put in between the n and s on fisherman 's . |
24 | ‘ That 's why I put in for the R.F.C. We 're literally the only sportsmen left . ’ |
25 | Denis and I drove in to the theatre . |
26 | ‘ All right if I drop in for a drink this evening ? ’ he said . |
27 | So I ducked in under the trap . |
28 | I glance in at the ASI — still reading 150 — then throw my heavy helmeted head back to see the white skyline creeping forward along the canopy . |
29 | I joined in with the carols — not that I know all the words dear , but I do know the tunes . ’ |
30 | And erm , the other aspect , the last aspect that gave us er anxiety was something I touched on this morning when I joined in at the end of the Selby discussion . |