Example sentences of "[noun pl] [vb mod] [verb] in [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Intending clients could stroll in from the street , look over what was on offer , and come to an arrangement with the young lady of their choice .
2 Design a chart the parents can fill in for a period of one week .
3 The workshop sessions at Highlander which had sought to clarify the types of information which were required led to the production of a coding sheet which research workers could fill in with the individual details , thereby ensuring both comprehensive coverage , and compatibility between researchers .
4 Everyday atoms would fall in towards the dark matter , and eventually form stars and galaxies , highlighting the peaks in the distribution of dark matter .
5 Little fishing boats would chug in to the harbour all through the morning , and unload a couple of trays of fish which were sold immediately in the bustling market .
6 Divisional teams will report in to the Group Steering Committee chaired by Frank Bell .
7 What 's more , there will be three of them , so your club 's second and third teams can get in on the act as well .
8 However , in a feedback circuit , if the 1kHz gain is set low , say 30 , or if the ‘ open loop gain ’ of the circuit is limited ( as opposed to very high ) , inaccuracies can creep in beyond the usual tolerances , and special consideration may then be necessary .
9 Well there was always the parlour , you must have the parlour and er you , you had two living rooms and the one was the parlour and there was a cellar underneath the parlour and er the stairs used to come in from the back and go up , up the stairs over the entrance to the cellar but the stairs used to run up there underneath the stairs was the entrance to the cellar , there was a door , so that you could n't just walk down the cellar without opening the door you see , but apart from that there was er there was just the two , two bedrooms .
10 Neighbours would come in for a drink and boxes of chocolates and handkerchiefs would be exchanged .
11 Well the surface weather observer will take temperature , pressure , humidity , erm the wind speed and direction , he will study visibility , he will see whether it 's raining or there are showers in his vicinity , erm study the amount of cloud , the type of cloud above him as he can see it , erm all these details will feed in onto a routine hourly observation .
12 Outside Israel , passengers can check in for a rival 's flight later and without so much hassle .
13 There 's been talk of seventeen and a half per cent being added to food , to public transport and to books and its now believed that VAT on domestic fuel , which was to have been introduced in stages may come in at the full rate in the spring .
14 Louisburg was captured again , and by the beginning of 1759 British forces could close in upon the centre of New France in the St. Lawrence valley .
15 A level-top , apart from its looking well , was emphasized for a good economic reason : if the ploughland was level , the drill coulters would bite in at an uniform depth , and sow the seed in the same way ; the ears of corn would then mature at approximately the same time and all the seeds of corn would be approximately the same size .
16 Also , remote users can dial in over a modem and access a network 's drives — this is really useful if you have people on the road who need access to office files .
17 Stray dogs and chickens wandered in and had to be shooed out , and in the winter evenings when her mother told stories about saints and piskies and dragon-fillers by the light of the fire , the neighbouring children would crowd in at the door to listen , so that after a while her mother became known as the best storyteller in Polruan .
18 A group of children will come in from a school , with their sixth form science teacher , and go round the chemistry laboratories for an afternoon looking at techniques like this .
19 Users of telecottages are given the key and people can use them at any time , which means that women can come in during the evening , early in the morning or whatever . ’
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