Example sentences of "[vb pp] in to [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | 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 . |
2 | The input cursive line data was first filled in to a consistent thickness . |
3 | 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 . |
4 | 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 . |
5 | This beggar had come in to the fitting shop , corner at the back corner , where he should n't have been . |
6 | Erm , once again , the problems are being addressed in to a certain extent regarding residential homes and we 're very pleased with that . |
7 | She never presumed on her friendship with Eve by expecting to be let in to the inner sanctum . |
8 | That overlooks the protection that is built in to the dampened banding system . |
9 | So it 's automatically built in to the first life assured , but it is an option for the second if they want it . |
10 | The ‘ subjective meaning ’ of what the woodsman or marksman is doing is built in to the basic description or interpretation of the facts . |
11 | Imagine you have just moved in to a new flat . |
12 | She had moved across the courtyard , flagstone by flagstone , to cheat the shadow ; now she was boxed in to the last corner of light . |
13 | And when , after lunch , she came downstairs in her new outfit , bought from Selfridge 's last week with the money which J. D. O'Connor had paid her for her articles , and with her next two articles in her bag , ready to be handed in to the great man himself before she returned to the rectory to pick up Rose Bailey , whose time off did not begin until four-thirty , both Dr Neil and Matey thought that she looked enchanting . |
14 | RECRUITS were bused in to the strike-hit Timex factory in Dundee yesterday , replacements for some of the 300 workers sacked during the dispute . |
15 | In a public library authority this can require all titles from all service points to be called in to a central point and their condition checked and compared . |
16 | Bob Bennett , Grenadier Guards , was one of those frustrated warriors who were called in to a large marquee . |
17 | She had risen this morning with the intention of going into town and meandering among the shops , perhaps treating herself to a new bonnet , or buying Cissie those pretty boots she had so admired some days ago when the two of them had walked up and down Ainsworth Street , browsing in all the shop-windows ; afterwards , Beth might have called in to the delightful tea rooms at the comer of the boulevard . |
18 | In Milan the victims and suspected victims — and it is hard to believe that non-sufferers ever survived being suspected sufferers — were herded in to a custom-built enclosure . |
19 | Too much packed in to a short time . |
20 | IF you 're tied in to a high mortgage rate it might be worth your while doing the switch . |
21 | The drawing suggests how a sector of resources has been ignored and is not linked in to the over-all plan . |
22 | She 'd just walked in to the nearest doorway and spilled the whole thing to a complete stranger . |
23 | The literature review will be set in to a general policy context of recent developments in the UK vocational training field . |
24 | Radiation emitted by the electron is transformed back to the laboratory frame , and is concentrated in to a narrow cone around the forward direction ( c ) , generating a ( Doppler ) frequency upshift ( γ ) . |
25 | The function of the weaving brushes is to push the yarn into the correct position so that it is laid in to the knitted fabric . |
26 | The Free Miners of the Forest of Dean were brought in to the general election campaign today , with a warning that their livelihoods could be ruined by imports of cheap foreign coal . |
27 | ‘ I expect to come out of these games with good results , ’ said Atkinson , before warning about hidden pitfalls in the long run in to the finishing line . |
28 | ‘ I 've been tuned in to the local station , ’ he said shortly . |
29 | The fact that visiting supporters were allowed in to the same terracing , even though distinctly segregated , was a constant source of irritation to many Oxford fans , and it was often pointed to as an explanation for the occurrence of ‘ bovver ’ . |
30 | Their royal nextdoor neighbours simply fitted in to a social landscape of friends and acquaintances who included the children of the Queen 's land agent , Charles and Alexandra Loyd , the local vicar 's daughter Penelope Ashton , and William and Annabel Fox , whose mother Carol was Diana 's godmother . |