Example sentences of "[be] [verb] [adv prt] in [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Marilyn has worked with Douglas Reyburn for just over a year as time keeper , but because of her clerical skills will also be helping out in the office when leave is taken by others .
2 Though the backgrounds of the successful ironmongers were varied , nearly all their families can be traced back in the neighbourhood to the sixteenth century , either through a direct line or through marriage .
3 The structure of the economy and society can be broken down in a variety of ways for a variety of purposes .
4 And I used to carry out their meals to the men , and they used to be eating out in the field then .
5 It may be that the student does not feel competent to discuss the various distinctions , but even so the existence of the possible distinctions should be pointed out in the answer .
6 This should be pointed out in the market counterparty notice .
7 One acoustic theory is immediately exploded : that a whisper on stage could be heard up in the back row ( Greek guides conveniently fail to take the wooden superstructure into account ) .
8 Dot remembered how sometimes there used to be singing down in the shelters in the dark .
9 But , whatever it is that her flooding liquid pigment does , one thing it always seems to be bringing about in the beholder .
10 The unit can include as many net-armed and as many club-armed Night Goblins as you wish , and they can be mixed up in the ranks as you please .
11 He had to be mixed up in the Cicero Club .
12 ‘ The probate thing will be sorted out in a month or so , ’ said Helen in strangled tones .
13 As usual , much of this can be sorted out in the pilot phase .
14 The draft constitution , to be voted on in the April referendum , would reduce the legislature to a single , bicameral body ; specify the supremacy of federal law over that of constituent republics ; and retain the President as " head of state and the highest executive in Russia " .
15 The legal process , when invoked , has to be speeded up in the interests of the child .
16 Whereas the railways in the past had been an integral part of the cityscape , running down main streets , leaving in their wake a succession of railroad crossings on the classic American street grid plan , by the turn of the century they were already disappearing behind fences , into cuttings , or underground , a process which was to be speeded up in the years leading to the First World War .
17 But final-stage rockets had misfired before , and at a time when people were whispering about a change of prime Minister and the shake-out that would bring , the very last thing Sladen must want was to be caught up in a brawl between Number 10 , the Foreign Office , Defence and the secret services .
18 The visitor to an auction may be caught up in the excitement and drama of the event , but the climate of opinion in which it takes place has been created by scholars and critics as well as businessmen .
19 ‘ We do n't want to be caught up in the rush when it comes . ’
20 It is so easy to be caught up in the whirl .
21 Every step is a chance to meet people , to give them the idea , the experience that can change their living and thinking ; to be caught up in an effort to bring a fundamental change to Rhodesia — and that means , of course , matching one 's own life to it .
22 It would be dreadful to be caught out in a lie ; dreadful at any time , but worse now , when he was being so friendly .
23 Do n't want to be caught out in the open when Jerry starts up .
24 Matilda happened to be curled up in an arm-chair in the corner , totally absorbed in a book .
25 Due to the extensive television coverage practically every hole on the course , and certainly all those on the second nine , can be conjured up in the mind 's eye , even when the tournament is long over .
26 Companies tend to use a ‘ firewall ’ along their route into Internet so that individuals can not be looked up in the directory of users — a sort of ex directory .
27 The fund will not pay a dividend ; all gains will be rolled up in the price .
28 They can be carried round in the pocket and referred to frequently — on the bus , while taking the dog for a walk , while shaving , almost anywhere .
29 That legislation can not be carried through in the remainder of this Parliament and will be a matter for the next Parliament .
30 The basic question at issue in the debate is whether the United Kingdom is to be carried along in the wake of those changes or to be a driving force for change .
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