Example sentences of "be [vb pp] in [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.
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31 | Many children are quite happy to run , push , pull , ride and climb , but when an adult is standing by , ready to help , she is sure to be drawn in by the children as in the following example . |
32 | While genuinely pot-grown fruit trees and bushes allow considerable latitude in planting times , bare-root specimens should really be got in before the end of March . |
33 | Registered mail has to be handed in to the post office , which issues an official receipt . |
34 | If anything had been brought in for you it had to be handed in at the screws ' table , and they had to sign the property book . |
35 | Alternatively , material can be handed in at the Emmaus Evenings held at Dehon House on the first Friday of each month . |
36 | Alternatively , material can be handed in at the Emmaus Evenings held at Dehon House on the first Friday of each month . |
37 | Individual registration forms could be dispensed with and a list of names , initials , nationality and passport numbers could be handed in by the tour operator . |
38 | Additionally , because the bridle will be wrapped in with the kite , and handled frequently , it has to withstand more abuse than the kitelines . |
39 | And when she straightened up and went to take the key from the lock his hand was there before hers , and as he handed the key back to her , he said on a laugh , ‘ I see you do n't intend to be locked in from the outside . ’ |
40 | This second phase of INDECS will be tied in with the computerisation of the Home Office 's confidential suspects index — a list of names which officers in the immigration service carry with them to check against the names on travellers ' passports . |
41 | Solicitors ( subject to very limited exceptions ) alone have the right to brief counsel , who will be called in as the occasion demands to give specialist advice , to draft documents or to act as advocate in the higher courts . |
42 | And who could have guessed that , with said gnashers playing him up , he would have to hand over one of his duties — and that a Labour MP would be called in from the subs ' bench . |
43 | The respiratory system had been modified , so that air could be breathed in through the nose , as customary , but out through apertures behind the ears . |
44 | Well I have to go now or I shall be roped in for the sacrifice and I do n't like getting my hands dirty . |
45 | Or is the program to be bound in with the hypertext , in such a fashion that the whole document becomes a metaprogram , which can be selectively ‘ executed ’ in a multitude of ways ? |
46 | ‘ Arrange for Kirov to be pulled in by the KGB . |
47 | Orders were issued for the cattle and geese to be driven in from the commons , the gates to be shut , the walls and bastions manned and all preparations for siege put into immediate operation . |
48 | Eventually , he mentioned the present writer and suggested that I should be brought in on the matter as I had already knowledge of one or two other cases . |
49 | The Lord Llewellyn had expected them to act inside , but there was no way in which the pageant could be brought in through the doors . |
50 | Queen Margaret sat at the head of the cracked , dangerously shaky table whilst Catesby ordered benches to be brought in for the rest . |
51 | Under new proposals expected to be brought in by the IAAF , starters are likely to lose their power as the final judges of what is a false start . |
52 | The profit per tonne in Aegina is falling , because trimming the trees and picking the nuts is a laborious business that modern workers can insist on being paid more for , and much of the water the trees need has to be brought in from the mainland . |
53 | ‘ — a high quality of legal advice , experience and competence in conducting and managing cases of this sort ; — the greater likelihood that all potential plaintiffs would be brought in from the outset , assisting the conduct of the case and giving greater certainty to defendants ; — the co-ordinated organisation of claims , research , expert opinions and pre-trial procedures . ’ |
54 | Even so the sum of money Minton had donated was so large that drinkers had to be brought in from the street . |
55 | There 's a couple more to be brought in from the pack on the horse . |
56 | It 's to be found in From the Life ( 1944 ) : one hundred sheets of wartime austerity paper to which Phyllis Bottome commits ‘ six studies of my friends ’ — that 's to say , Alfred Adler , Max Beerbohm , Ivor Novello , Sara Delano Roosevelt , Ezra Pound , and Margaret MacDonald Bottome ( this last the writer 's American grandmother who in her forties became an influential evangelical orator ) . |
57 | Any gentleman intending to join was required to produce a lock of his own mistress 's pubic hair to be woven in with the original . |
58 | Unlike the fully suspended sentence which had become popular , in some ways too popular with the initial enthusiasm of the courts having to be reined in by the Court of Appeal , the partly suspended sentence never caught on . |
59 | Proponents of the scheme hope that new money will be put in from the NUS to smooth over any such problems ; also to remedy the poor funding of crèches generally . |
60 | When kicked directly into touch from a penalty kick , the ball will be thrown in at the lineout by the team which kicked the ball into touch . |