Example sentences of "[vb pp] in [prep] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | The people who are seizing and occupying the present time can not belong in my colour , they 're like the bits that leap out of a spinning bowl , too heavy , too separate and distinct to be blended in with the other substances ; red-hot stones , flung out and setting on fire the place where they land . |
2 | Andre had fallen in with the legendary Lafons of Meursault — Dominique Lafon was at college at the same time , and Lafon pere had become something of a mentor . |
3 | Turkey is flown in with the weekly food supplies , while in Tripoli some enterprising expats even breed turkeys specifically for the festive table . |
4 | I listened with interest to my hon. Friend the Member for Stamford and Spalding ( Mr. Davies ) , who almost conveyed the impression that he had been parachuted in to an Amazonian jungle in which democratic accountability plays no role , and that we needed the benefit of a judgment on arbitrage and merger policy from New York city . |
5 | MEMBERS of LASMO Nova Scotia 's relative response team recently checked in for a flying visit around the Halifax international heliport . |
6 | The other hand , also in a clenched fist position , is tucked in against the opposite side of the body , with the thumb and fingers facing upwards . |
7 | However , on Saturday , October 10 , it is pencilled in for a proposed Newcastle to Maryport via Leeds , Skipton and Workington special , returning to Bradford Forster Square . |
8 | However , due to the short notice , Randalstown would have been without four key players on May 15 which was pencilled in as the reserve date . |
9 | We 've plunged in with the practical details rather than training itself . |
10 | In this case we were lucky and the route had been re-equipped with new bolts placed in between the old bolts . |
11 | They yesterday found out which rating band their houses had been placed in for the new tax , which starts next April . |
12 | The input cursive line data was first filled in to a consistent thickness . |
13 | Sparse eyebrows can be filled in with a sharpened eye pencil , but soften with a brush afterwards so there is no hard line . |
14 | 6/Highlights are masked out while areas are filled in with a thin wash . |
15 | The dots are filled in with the appropriate names like this : |
16 | Abercrombie 's broad-brush strategy was now filled in with the complementary prescriptions for design at the local scale , both central areas and residential districts . |
17 | The Acting Reporter from Strathclyde , Gordon Sloan , who had filled in for the past year , would continue to look after the cases with which he had been involved . |
18 | That diary is filled in on every single day throughout that year — 1940 . |
19 | He immediately took to his heels with is case of cigarettes and led me a merry dance away from the docks , through a council estate , finally finishing up on the perimeter track of Ipswich Airport where I was rescued in the nick of time by a squad car full of policemen just as I was about to be filled in by the burly seaman . |
20 | For the sake of a quiet life he had given in to an unreasonable request and only now did he fully realize what it meant . |
21 | At the end of it , just before Myeloski had given in to the rough flight conditions , Duncan had come to realize how sharp the policeman was , how through his individual approach he had put together clues that most others would have missed . |
22 | The dancing was to good old rock and roll music , and even those who were just a twinkle in their father 's eye in the 6Os joined in with the jiving fun . |
23 | Then a Leed rang up saying that he was there and that the particular aviatical chant in question had been initially struck up by the away end , and only joined in by a shameful minority ( ahem ) of Leeds fans . |
24 | Other sounds caught in between the meaningless words . |
25 | ( At their first overhaul , this batch were given full internal bulkheads and an extra seat was squeezed in on the top deck . ) |
26 | Route options have been squeezed in down a narrow corridor of land near the A19 . |
27 | We turned our ponies and galloped back to the Legation , where we learnt that news had just come in of a great victory for the Shoan army . |
28 | It turned out to have come in through the curved zip which is unprotected by a weather flap . |
29 | This beggar had come in to the fitting shop , corner at the back corner , where he should n't have been . |
30 | While it has come in for a certain amount of criticism , it has also attracted much praise , especially from industry . |