Example sentences of "[vb -s] in [prep] [art] [noun] of " in BNC.

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1 We simply do not know how it fits in to the system of sociolinguistic variation and stratification in the city as a whole .
2 An administrative culture — which is concerned with rules , roles , authority and fits in with the concept of a role culture .
3 The Open University offers you a lifelong opportunity to continue your education — to whatever level you want , and in a way that fits in with the rest of your life .
4 However we feel that it is important that each type of service debates the issues fully , in order to reach a realistic agreed policy , which also fits in with the policies of other local services .
5 I look forward especially to a future opportunity to develop his views on the desirability of keeping national insurance contributions as low as possible and of working out exactly how that fits in with the policies of some of his right hon. and hon. Friends , but that is for another occasion , Madam Deputy Speaker .
6 However , the observation that the delivery time of a particular item from the Annexe depends very largely on how well the request for it fits in with the schedule of the van running between the Library and the Annexe , suggests that it might be helpful to readers if the van 's times of operation and the main pressmarks of outhoused material were advertised .
7 This winsome description fits in with the descriptions of the messianic age in the book of Isaiah , with the wolf lying down with the lamb , the lion and the ox eating straw together , and the little child playing happily and fearlessly with them and even putting its little hand unhurt into the hole of the poisonous viper .
8 All of which fits in with the differences of stomach contents with which we began .
9 In the next chapters we will go on to consider what homoeopathy is , how it arose and developed , and how it fits in with the scheme of health and disease outlined here .
10 We follow our own way , the way which fits in with the conditions of our time and our country . ’
11 For now , 16 years later , and with two children aged seven and nine , she is running , from her Croydon home , a thriving sole practice that fits in with the demands of a young family .
12 Darwin 's own account of the unrestrained ‘ law of battle ’ in animals readily fits in with the theory of natural selection ; therefore , as his account of the law of battle is now thought to be wrong , we are left with the problem of reconciling new observation and established theory .
13 This is a ‘ partial subjectivity : that which fits in with the subject-of-science of the positivist ideology of science ; also , it is a subjectivity which is consistent with the rationalising subject of capitalist economic exchange ’ ( Henriques et al .
14 Although it might be a temptation to say hot air , because you do put hot air in , but it says goes in at the top of the furnace .
15 He goes in for a sort of hall-of-mirrors self-impersonation , telling people how he would have done the murder if he had done it ( which he has ) .
16 Now , Julie has a modern kitchen that 's been carefully designed to make good use of all the available space , and that blends in with the style of the rest of the house .
17 Aye and what happens is , it usually starts in at the corner of your finger
18 Throughout our recent evolutionary history , particularly since the rise of a hunting way of life , there must have been extreme selective pressures in favour of our ability to co-operate as a group : organized food gathering and hunts are successful only if each member of the band knows his task and joins in with the activity of his fellows ; a good deal of restraint on natural impulses during the stalk and capture of the prey is likewise essential .
19 For observers who find the pace of the SCAN analysis too demanding , or who wish to concentrate on other things , the coarse observation kit uses checklists which the observer fills in at the end of each short teaching episode .
20 Food and Drink : The Alsace improviser Lucy Bailey tunes in to the style of jazz fan and winemaker Andre Ostertag
21 Andrea Stuart tunes in to the rhythms of black history with Toni Morrison ; Carol Rumens glimpses the glamour of old Russia with Tatyana Tolstaya ; D J Taylor listens to the rural English past with Adam Thorpe
22 He wades in among the pair of them , grabs their studded leather collars and starts yanking them away .
23 When he roars in from the back of the auditorium , swinging on to the stage from a box , you know that this is the start of something very good .
24 Chris Tavaré at first slip gets in on a piece of history .
25 But if a school sees itself as a community school , giving out as much as — or more than — it takes in in the shape of benefit to individual pupils , the manager must decide with some or all the partners on which aspects of community education to concentrate .
26 That ties in with the findings of a remarkable researcher .
27 The conference theme ‘ A Better Mousetrap ’ , ties in with the centenary of crime novelist Agatha Christie , who turned up at The Old Swan after her own mysterious disappearance , and the titles of some of the papers will reflect the investigation , detection and arrest of some villains that threaten our property , our health or our lives .
28 ( Once you get beyond knitting all-over Fair Isle , this is n't difficult to understand , because for some stitches — tuck and lace for example — the point cams are positioned two stitches in from the edge of the knitting , in order to stop pattern knitting short of the edges .
29 However , as I said before , for tuck and slip one positions the point cams two stitches in from the edge of the knitting to give a neat edge .
30 In the A monomer , the β -hairpin is extended , whereas in the B monomer , it bends in towards the body of the molecule .
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