Example sentences of "[coord] [adj] [noun] be [verb] in " in BNC.
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1 | Company cars were charged a double rate and — a master stroke — cars with four or more occupants were allowed in free . |
2 | One or more levels were put in from the side of Levers Water to carry out a shallow sub-surface investigation of veins which appeared to be untried , or suspected to be covered at outcrop . |
3 | During the critical week beginning February 28th , over 25,000 tons of supplies and 190,000 men were brought in over it to Verdun . |
4 | A small army of council workers and private companies were called in to change hundreds of locks after the keys disappeared last week . |
5 | A small army of council workers and private companies were called in to change hundreds of locks after the keys disappeared last week . |
6 | There 's some shops too and some people are going in to buy things — papers and books and that . |
7 | Whereas now we have put in a culture of performance , measuring against standards , and this year are bringing in performance-related pay . |
8 | He comes across a flock of sheep belonging to the priest , one of which he takes ; he then returns to the priest , pretending not to be the traveller already refused entry , and this time is accepted in as he offers the sheep in payment . |
9 | Officers from the child protection team and social services were called in after the girl turned to an elderly neighbour for help , Scotland Yard said . |
10 | The economy was strengthened and German miners were brought in from Transylvania to develop the copper , tin , gold , silver and lead mines of the interior . |
11 | Marx , in particular , had already noted this fact in several places , but he explained the phenomenon of internal division as a transitional one ; as evidence of a stage in which private property and individual families were coming in and undermining the communal descent group . |
12 | The coach found Caddick ‘ technically adrift ’ during a match at Lord 's , and extra work was put in to rectify the faults . |
13 | A flurry of bangs hit the door and before Allan Stewart could shoot back the bolt gun-butts had burst through the timbers , the bolt and its socket tore the jamb away , and soldiers in blue coats and white breeches were stepping in across the wreckage . |
14 | On May 1 more than 10,000 US Army troops and National Guardsmen were deployed in and around the city . |
15 | James Woodforde , ever a reliable source for the minutiae of late 18th-century life , wrote on 25 January 1794 that he could never remember having seen the barometer lower ; a savage and relentless winter was setting in throughout Britain and the rest of Europe . |
16 | The narrowing down of this primitive trade-route took place , perhaps in stages , in Saxon and early medieval times as more and more land was taken in for arable cultivation . |
17 | You , you say you noticed more and more machinery being brought in over the years ? |
18 | Always make sure that all passengers and heavy loads are strapped in . |
19 | 10 sows and one boar were moved in during the autumn and they 've already had 50 piglets . |
20 | Liberals had argued for a wider franchise for years and Unionists had demanded a redistribution , so both sides got something of what they wanted and proportional representation was thrown in with the present mood of Labour in mind , so that the anti-socialist parties would be able to consolidate their position if necessary . |
21 | Others from the Party and ministerial apparatus are brought in as needed . |
22 | An inspector , two sergeants and eighteen men of the Metropolitan Police arrived and 150 specials were sworn in . |
23 | When at last we were all safely in a carriage , he would saunter off to buy a paper , and other people were coming in . |
24 | These radios and other stores were brought in by the small steamer Kuru , which was fitted with a device in her stack to prevent the tell-tale streamer of fumes ; these she released in occasional puffs . |
25 | Their leader had quiet words with the cardinal , who smiled , clapped his hands , and a green baize-covered table and two chairs were brought in and set down in the middle of the hall . |
26 | Two hundred and fifty-four knives were handed in yesterday throughout Strathclyde . |
27 | The scene is the kitchen at The Kilns and both sets are plugged in . |
28 | In the mating season finding a partner is more important than camouflage and bright colours are moulted in , but during the rest of the year self-protection dominates and camouflage returns . |
29 | Corbett sniffed the sweet tangy air and realised autumn was coming in . |
30 | Various events such as Powerboat Races , Circuit of Ireland Rally , Carnivals , Mountain Bike Races and Fun Runs are held in or around the lake and farmlands and there are ample parking facilities . |