Example sentences of "[be] [verb] in [prep] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 When building timber steps , these treads can be filled in with compacted soil , finishing off with bark chippings .
2 Only one copy of Section 1 needs to be filled in , but ideally separate copies of Sections 2 , 3 and 4 should be filled in for each course taught in the appropriate field .
3 It is easy to assume that there was a gap in Darwin 's theory that would later be filled in by modern knowledge of heredity .
4 Sometimes the Pemberton Musks are listed separately , sometimes they may be listed in with Modern Shrub Roses as well as Hybrid Musks , or they may be listed in with it , which is all very confusing .
5 No money from any of the manager 's other interests could be mixed in with this account , and the manager should not be allowed to borrow money from it .
6 A fill can be dropped in at any time while the pattern is playing .
7 A fill can be dropped in at any time while the pattern is playing .
8 Then he 'll be walking in with this quiz an
9 Yeah , but is n't that going to be incorporated in as one package ?
10 They must be turned in within 30 days after taking delivery of a Sun IPX or SparcStation 2 .
11 Or she may be working on a rabbit and be boxed in in one direction while another ferret has backed one or more rabbits behind her .
12 It can be signed by anyone under 18 and will be handed in at 10 Downing Street , later this year .
13 There were no windows , but two large openings that could be closed in by folding doors .
14 We never seem to be going in for young players from lower divisions anymore .
15 two small seats for children are fitted in the back , and an adult , sitting sideways , could be packed in for short trips
16 I could be called in at any moment .
17 The second issue — the risk that some good payers will be lumped in with bad payers , and treated like them , simply because they share some background characteristics with them — is discussed in chapter 5 , under ‘ Credit scoring ’ .
18 The new dispenser system is set to be phased in on other BNFL sites at a later date .
19 I bet there 's loads of them like it in there , these should be tapped in by both leads
20 The main point , however , is that this alternative way of analysing profit seems to lend itself more naturally to business thinking and can be linked in with conceptual thinking about strategy .
21 Shifts split up the family so that men would be coming in at all hours of the day , waiting for the bath-tin and the water and a woman to wash their backs .
22 Added to the difficulty of implementing blanket controls are the following factors : few ports of entry have any animal holding facilities , making it impossible for animals to be kept back ; customs staff often do not have the necessary background to identify an endangered animal ; and containers can be difficult to examine and endangered species can be smuggled in with other animals .
23 Mains electricity was supposedly going to be brought in at some stage , but God only knew when that would be .
24 The incentive aspect may be brought in at this stage to define a reward for the contractor for finishing on or before the contract completion date and compensation to the customer for finishing late .
25 It was that Katy Laidlaw , as the Home Organisation Secretary of the Church of Scotland , be brought in on any meeting with C.Aid staff and the Committee .
26 NEW faces are certain to be brought in for this summer 's Ashes series after England 's winter humiliation was completed by defeat against Sri Lanka in Colombo yesterday .
27 He might be brought in for periodic boosters or to help when the problem is in the degree of difficulty and intensity not experienced before .
28 Third , there should be a competition tribunal , which would be brought in in two circumstances .
29 The final election results had not been compiled by the end of December because many ballots had to be brought in from remote villages .
30 The 50-cent man is restricted to using the knife on the most delicate parts of the hide ( floorman ) or to using the ax in splitting the backbone ( splitter ) ; and wherever a less-skilled man can be slipped in at 18 cents , 18½ cents , 20 cents , 21 cents , 22½ cents , 24 cents , 25 cents , and so on , a place is made for him , and an occupation mapped out .
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