Example sentences of "[vb -s] [verb] in [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Nevertheless , Sun has come in for no small amount of criticism in pursuing what is often strictly an ‘ invented here ’ approach to technology solutions , at the expense of making some pragmatic marketing decisions . |
2 | While it has come in for a certain amount of criticism , it has also attracted much praise , especially from industry . |
3 | Understandably , this presumption has come in for a great deal of criticism . |
4 | From Wolhusen the circular itinerary now continues south on road 10 which has come in on the left ( ie east from Luzern . |
5 | 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 . |
6 | And now Dennis Gray has weighed in with a second version of his ‘ Life as a Climbing Tyke ’ — the first having been that marvellous tale of human bondage from 20 year ago , Rope Boy , or ‘ How I survived an apprenticeship with Joe Brown and started to love climbing ’ . |
7 | This is our first effort at a full newsletter and we now really appreciate how much effort Lynn has put in over the last few years . |
8 | Fiona , whose businessman husband Rod Potts lives in Cumbria , plans to turn in at the same time as her baby daughter Natasha . |
9 | That is what the Labour party intends to bring in after the next election . |
10 | On The Woman I Am , Chaka takes control again and , while the arrangements struggle to fill every available space with drum patterns and horn fills , she keeps swooping in like a dive-bombing seagull and forcing songs and producers into submission . |
11 | The period of time when acceptance becomes possible seems to link in with the first anniversary of events . |
12 | ( A teenager who forgets to call in at the appointed time may cause real distress ) . |
13 | It comes trailing in across the seething crowd of heads without a single bite . |