Example sentences of "[is] [vb pp] in [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Turkey is flown in with the weekly food supplies , while in Tripoli some enterprising expats even breed turkeys specifically for the festive table . |
2 | The steam centre based in the Warwick Road , Birmingham is situated in between the main British Rail diesel multiple unit maintenance depot and re-fuelling sidings , complete with a large car-park for several hundred cars . |
3 | That diary is filled in on every single day throughout that year — 1940 . |
4 | The other hand , also in a clenched fist position , is tucked in against the opposite side of the body , with the thumb and fingers facing upwards . |
5 | However , on Saturday , October 10 , it is pencilled in for a proposed Newcastle to Maryport via Leeds , Skipton and Workington special , returning to Bradford Forster Square . |
6 | That overlooks the protection that is built in to the dampened banding system . |
7 | The ‘ subjective meaning ’ of what the woodsman or marksman is doing is built in to the basic description or interpretation of the facts . |
8 | Condensation is particularly likely to occur where natural air circulation is restricted — for example , in the corners of rooms , or behind furniture ( especially if it is built in against a cold outside wall ) . |
9 | The chamber is then flooded from below with 3375 litres ( 750gal ) of dip , which is pumped in from a nearby vacuum tanker . |
10 | In the second play , Audience , Ferdinand is called in by the head maltster , played by Freddie Jones , who insists that he joins him for a drink and a chat . |
11 | If Sheila does not co-operate with social workers , it may not help if her mother is dragged in on the social workers ' side . |
12 | Given that this reform will hit hardest those firms with most part-time workers , it is suggested that this change is phased in over a five-year period . |
13 | 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 . |
14 | Radiation emitted by the electron is transformed back to the laboratory frame , and is concentrated in to a narrow cone around the forward direction ( c ) , generating a ( Doppler ) frequency upshift ( γ ) . |
15 | ‘ It 's linked in with an audio tape facility which comes through the left earpiece , and the computer sound connects with the other . ’ |
16 | This is followed in by the 16.05 ex Birmingham — in at 19.14 , out again at 19.22 . |
17 | He runs away to the city where he is taken in by The Old Lady . |
18 | Therefore , the less this inner consciousness or Life Force is hemmed in by an instinctive mind structure , then the greater is the capacity for caring feeling and the more an offspring is capable of learning . |