Example sentences of "[pron] [vb past] in to [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Until I moved in to the Rectory at Seend , I lived briefly at the Bell Inn , St Edith 's Marsh , Bromham , near Devizes . |
2 | 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 . |
3 | Denis and I drove in to the theatre . |
4 | I PULLED in to a diner about five miles short of Waldron and took aboard some fried ham and a couple of eggs sunny side up . |
5 | I did n't need warming up but I pulled in to the kerb without hesitation . |
6 | only had this sprung on me er today er when I went in to the Hall and and and saw them with a notice and a table collecting signatures . |
7 | After about a year I gave in to the pull and discovered that fatherhood has made me a much more serious person . |
8 | was my essay , I wrote in to the education was that , the top and bottom of personal discipline |
9 | As she climbed in to the Glass Coach with her father , Diana had several practical considerations to overcome . |
10 | At first the numbers of those who tuned in to the BBC were modest in comparison to those who listened to Pétain 's homilies on Radio Vichy . |
11 | She stepped in to the room on the soft carpet and said loudly in French , ‘ What the hell do you think you 're doing ? ’ |
12 | As you went in to the head end where the roof bolts were still intact , it was hard to imagine that approximately forty six metre , fifty metre of gate had just come in one go . |
13 | She had seen her , and now she wanted to go , before she gave in to an impulse and started asking her questions about Elaine . |
14 | Their arguments were supported by a former compositor " now in a position to place books for printing " , who wrote in to the Edinburgh Evening News in 1910 : " Generally speaking , I can get work done in London , as well as in the English provincial towns , under Edinburgh prices , which proves that even with female labour , the Edinburgh printers have a hard task to keep their men fully employed … |
15 | No-one cared that she jacked in to the lock on the tutor 's door , feeling around mentally to jig it open . |
16 | We went in to the University and met up with Ian Jamieson , who invited us to come and stay with them for a few days . |
17 | Seventy-four , they came in to the collection in seventy-four . |
18 | He opened the window after they turned in to the country . |
19 | We gazed enraptured at the city of Bath from the train as it drew in to the station — it was all laid out on the slopes of Lansdown like an aerial map of a moon landscape . |
20 | ‘ He came in to the shop and asked me what he should wear on the date . |
21 | Erm having made these contributions erm he got a note to the effect from the T P A that erm some of the money that he paid in to the A B C had to be repaid to him as a lump sum because the money coming from that sum would have taken his pension over the forty eightieths . |
22 | By the Spirit he went in to the wilderness , by the Spirit he was led there , and in the power of the Spirit he returned to Galilee to begin his ministry ( Luke 4:1,14 ) . |
23 | He went in to the patient , a man in his thirties , and smiled a hello . |
24 | He gave in to the pressure on Oct. 14 when he announced his resignation from the Diet , a move which sparked a fierce struggle for the leadership of the 110-member Takeshita faction . |
25 | It gave in to the weariness . |
26 | So they er would have done the same thing in those days , the children , and erm it fitted in to the easter holiday time to have the actual ploughing match , you see ? |