Example sentences of "[be] [vb pp] in [prep] the [noun pl] " in BNC.
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1 | Erm , I like it there to be filled in by the managers older by about two years or so . |
2 | This serial number will be filled in by the lexicographers and will represent the order in which the Project Director requires the forms to be actioned . |
3 | ‘ We pulled out all the stops to produce extra stock needed to meet the charter flights , so the paint could be flown in over the weekends . ’ |
4 | Instead we leave the pictures to be stripped in at the printers , and get a better image as a result . |
5 | Slate is marvellous to look at but at a marvellous price , and there is an enormous choice in ceramic tiles which can be mixed in among the terracottas for an ethnic Mexican or Provencale , Italian , Spanish or Portuguese look . |
6 | Requests for consumables ( printer ribbons , disks , computer paper etc. ) , software , and small hardware items ( T-switches etc. ) should be written in to the Consumables Book in my office . |
7 | In principle , the idea of holding Open Days is a good one , but these events need to be planned at least two years in advance , so that funding , manpower , and equipment resources can be built in to the estimates for all those Garden Departments which will be involved . |
8 | Many children are quite happy to run , push , pull , ride and climb , but when an adult is standing by , ready to help , she is sure to be drawn in by the children as in the following example . |
9 | If anything had been brought in for you it had to be handed in at the screws ' table , and they had to sign the property book . |
10 | And who could have guessed that , with said gnashers playing him up , he would have to hand over one of his duties — and that a Labour MP would be called in from the subs ' bench . |
11 | Orders were issued for the cattle and geese to be driven in from the commons , the gates to be shut , the walls and bastions manned and all preparations for siege put into immediate operation . |
12 | The Lord Llewellyn had expected them to act inside , but there was no way in which the pageant could be brought in through the doors . |
13 | Proponents of the scheme hope that new money will be put in from the NUS to smooth over any such problems ; also to remedy the poor funding of crèches generally . |
14 | ‘ It 'll have to be taken in at the seams . ’ |
15 | I do n't like him , but he 's a cynical bastard and wo n't be taken in by the likes of Buckmaster . ’ |
16 | A police spokesman said that the woman victim had all her faculties and they feared that others could be taken in by the smooth-talkers . |
17 | ‘ That was a dream move for him and meant a big transformation for a lad of his age to suddenly be pitched in with the stars at Liverpool , ’ said England Under-21 boss Lawrie McMenemy . |
18 | Their current training programme means two nights a week in the gym , one night running six miles , two outings a day at the weekend in their single sculls , a 6.30am outing once a week as part of a national squad eight then two more sculling outings have to be fitted in during the weekdays . |
19 | Even Egyptians , whose soldiers may well be sent in on the allies ' side , hate the spectacle of a fellow Muslim , a defier of Zionists , being shot up by America 's whizz-bang weaponry . |
20 | Well I certainly believe that many of these expertises will be held centrally at County Hall and will be purchased in by the schools , and there is nothing wrong in that . |