Example sentences of "have [verb] in [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | You can count on the fingers of one hand the times Mr Kinnock has jumped in among the public . |
2 | The bridge has fallen in with the Mayor and Corporation on it . |
3 | Gran has joined in on the act . |
4 | President Berisha , however , has given in to the nationalists over the question of property restitution . |
5 | All the lights are up and cold air has come in with the officials . |
6 | But , in such a statement , the fact that were sides has crept in round the back . |
7 | Panic has set in as the league 's Draconian restructuring unfolds with four clubs relegated from Division One and seven from Division Two . |
8 | This is where the Arts Council has stepped in with the argument that if the scheme promotes a form of art which does not conform to their qualitative criteria , it should be abolished . |
9 | ‘ You tend to forget all the hard work that has gone in over the season . |
10 | The efforts that Sony has put in for the NEWS outside Japan would give NEC a flying start in the US and Europe should it decide to enter the international workstation market . |
11 | exactly , but who has to pay in to the contingency fund if it 's agreed by the residence ? |
12 | It occurs as that in Judges 9.9 and 13 , and here it might indicate nothing more than the all-embracing nature of the struggles which Jacob has engaged in during the course of his life . |
13 | I glance , speculatively , towards the window , where more bad weather has blown in from the North Sea . |
14 | A baffled ox has horned in through the wall . |
15 | But William 's grandad was too busy working to notice or care , riding shotgun to a great clattering brute of a knitting machine that reminded him of the Irish cobs he 'd broken in for the brewery ; he could knit thirty fully fashioned stockings an hour , sixteen hours a day . |
16 | He 'd got in with the punks and seen immediately what they were doing , what a renaissance this was in music . |
17 | ‘ I 'd got in amongst the sharks , filming them in a feeding frenzy . ’ |
18 | Mind , he 'd crashed in on the situation pretty damn quickly , stepping in and being nice to her almost before she had dried her eyes , trying to get her on the rebound . |
19 | She was cracking those damn peppermints in her back teeth to disguise the fact she 'd called in at the Oyster Bar on her way up . ’ |
20 | no did n't like how he grouted it because she said there , things like a little nick in the tile , if he 'd gone in with the grouting it would n't of shown any and he did n't |
21 | Michael had been hitting the phone , recruiting some key staff from hotels he 'd worked in in the past . |
22 | I 'd come in in the middle of something . |
23 | She has had to give in over the question of chrome : and the Foreign Minister , who never struck me as being too friendly towards us , failed to get away ( as he apparently hoped ) with letting armed German ships through the Straits . |
24 | Juan Sosa , former Panamanian ambassador in Washington , said that , if the US had been ‘ more active ’ , several battalions of wavering Panamanian troops would have joined in on the rebel side . |
25 | This particular form of the game is not that old , having come in in the middle of the last century , when changes took place in the technology of pelota . |
26 | Well you 'll have to come in on the way ho |
27 | A tidy desk and behind it a man who might have come in on the Saturday afternoon for extra work . |
28 | Ronnie must have come in through the yard door without her knowing … |
29 | She sat at the table and painstakingly wrote down the sums of money that should have come in for the work already done . |
30 | Otherwise whoever it was would probably have come in from the corridor . |