Example sentences of "[noun sg] [adv] [verb] in [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Afterwards I sit with him in the room at the back , the late afternoon light still coming in through the windows .
2 Given the amount of negative equity still locking in to the system , it may be instructive to look at the UK consumer 's reaction to lower interest rates .
3 Finally I turned and started back , not conscious of anything , my mind still locked in on the impression the place had made so that I only vaguely heard a voice calling me .
4 Both convergent and divergent modes of thought are necessary for a creative act to occur : the writer must actually arrange his freely associated ideas into organised prose or the scientist finally home in on the solution to a problem .
5 And then there was the attempt not to issue a questionnaire to every household but to reserve the questionnaires in the Town Hall for four week days Saturdays to will honour the people who did n't actually have Friday who were at home perhaps walk in to the City Centre you might be able to pick one of these up and then there was the problem distrib in distributing the questionnaire because despite of the assurance given to the consultants they were nevertheless distributed amongst the numerous St Albans and believe you me even those likely people who did go to the press do sometimes for every that we having suddenly fully congressed to see whether perhaps there might be a consultation questionnaire lurking within it .
6 That will be the second biggest rights issue ever made in in the UK , lagging only behind the ill-fated BP issue in 1987 .
7 Well , before mid-afternoon all the men — and extra help always came in for the threshing — were incapable of working .
8 ‘ By tradition the money always comes in at the end .
9 Implexion eventually gave in to the Grand Masters ' begging and pleading and , for a fee , agreed to present Valiance 's case to the Chamber of Ten .
10 Faster than a machine gun , it can reach peak rates of 200 pulses per second as the bat finally closes in on the moving target .
11 Ted Walker astonishes with his honesty , and this autobiography bubbles with sane optimism , a refusal ever to give in to the temptations of self-pity .
12 Rain now poured in through the broken window , the wind also whipping through , buffeting Julie as she moved across to the back door .
13 Since entrances were not screened and materials were poor — many of them one brick thick or built in pisé , a version of mud — they were cold and cheerless , with rain actually driving in through the walls .
14 The antibiotic mould supposedly drifting in on the wind becomes prosaic when its magic is revealed only by tedious operations in a laboratory or factory .
15 The ideology of psychologism also fits in with the need for motivating people for productive work , and at the same time makes possible and legitimates a fascination with mystery and magic .
16 Under the 1987 Philippines Constitution , once the existing bases agreement expired , " foreign military bases , troops or facilities shall not be allowed in the Philippines except under a treaty duly concurred in by the Senate [ upper house of parliament ] … and recognized as a treaty by the other contracting state " .
17 Rapid weight loss may have made you feel good at the time , but depression and frustration soon set in as the pounds or kilos slowly creep back on again .
18 The Nepalese government quickly fell in with the World Wildlife Fund 's proposals for ‘ Operation Tiger ’ and Park as a sanctuary for tigers , later enlarged to 360 square miles ( 930 sq km ) with the aid of the Frankfurt designated 210 square miles ( 545 sq km ) of the Royal Chitawan National Zoological Society .
19 Yesterday the Scottish Landowners ' Federation also got in on the act , claiming that the quota sale had confirmed fears about value .
20 Twamley then came in from the backyard and when accused by Riley , he denied it , offering also to be searched .
21 ‘ We have changed the model slightly to fit in with the look of now .
22 what kind of activities does the individual usually engage in with the purpose of maintaining a safe environment ?
23 ‘ Of witnesses we have no need , and as for the evidence , why … four barrels of brandy obligingly carried in by the accused themselves .
24 And the searchlights the the battery that we were The camp that we were near , they opened fire and the battery would open fire at that , and the searchlight anyway came in through the window .
25 The tale is in fact carefully tied in as the Shipman 's Tale at the beginning of fragment VII , with an endlink that binds it to the Prioress 's Tale that follows it .
26 The location of the entrepreneurship of the fifth Kondratiev actually seems determined by publicly funded research , and most of the scientific and professional work-force actually moved in to the areas .
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