Example sentences of "[vb pp] in on [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 That diary is filled in on every single day throughout that year — 1940 .
2 Mike needs to be filled in on the latest developments . ’
3 ( At their first overhaul , this batch were given full internal bulkheads and an extra seat was squeezed in on the top deck . )
4 By imagining these two kinds of plant , we have zeroed in on the crucial difference between a bottlenecked and an unbottlenecked life cycle .
5 If he had been walking out with any other girl in service in the town they could have stayed in on a wet night and talked by the kitchen range , but with the Hogans hovering around he had to bring Patsy out into the rain .
6 If Sheila does not co-operate with social workers , it may not help if her mother is dragged in on the social workers ' side .
7 The new Cabinet , sworn in on the same day , contained no members from Fujimori 's politically inexperienced Change 90 ( Cambio 90 ) movement .
8 Then a motorcyclist was brought in on a blue light , a dispatch rider who had been burning along the Norwich road and hit a patch of oil .
9 Thus the composition was blocked in on a warm basis , over which he would lay a series of glazes .
10 We had barged in on an 18-day course on Bioregionalism at Schumacher College , in the Old Postern at Dartington , conducted by Kirkpatrick Sale .
11 She would smile and be lighthearted and welcome them all back and have a bathroom put in on the top floor .
12 We were kept in on a strict curfew and given meagre amounts of pocket money each week , which was just enough to buy food and travel to the DHSS office .
13 On that basis , the CAP has not protected the small farmer because large , efficient farms have cashed in on the guaranteed payment scheme and produced huge quantities of food , using increasingly intensive methods .
14 BOSSES have cashed in on the Euro money crisis .
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