Example sentences of "[verb] [adv prt] in [adv] " in BNC.

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1 It can not have changed much in two hundred years and still , today , the tireless plume of woodsmoke wafts up from the chimney , proving that life goes on in much the same way as it always have done in this particular vicinity .
2 It is more difficult to understand the senseless vandalism that goes on in comparatively affluent areas .
3 Now Sammy was a character in himself he was a bachelor and his wi his sister was Fanny the elocutionist er and , and er there the women used to , to go into old Sammy 's shop on a Friday night simply to be entertained by all the wisecracks and nonsense that used to go on in there , and somebody would say I suppose you 're off this weekend and he 'd say yes I 'm off to my little widow in Wales , he had n't got a little widow in Wales at all now but it would the start of the conversation going .
4 What else used to go on in there in the way of activities you mentioned billiards and card games and dancing ?
5 NCR Corp has finally abandoned the traditional mainframe business , driven out of it by another company that is hanging on in there by its fingernails .
6 Well that 's right , yes , and the other thing as well , I should n't really be telling you this , , because it 's bad news for us but , if you in fact write a long , rambling press release , what you will find is that the journalist will almost , almost certainly go three-quarters of the way down it to find the real story which is hidden in there , and occasionally that real story is purposely hidden down in there , and you know you look at any council minutes , and the real story is always , inevitably hidden down there , because it 's the bit that somebody does n't want people to know about , and so journalists are naturally trained to go down the bit to find out what 's it about .
7 If this type of interviewer senses a weak spot he or she will hang on in there — mercilessly .
8 Aha , when the pantomime started up that was just carried on in there .
9 Clearly , clearly , the survey could n't be carried on in very many parts of the sewer because the pipes are in such bad condition .
10 Misreading the clues , they head off in completely the wrong direction and manage to become the first people ever to get shipwrecked on one of the islands of Derwentwater .
11 He was struck by how similar the behaviour of different species can be , as in ( for example ) the courtship of different species of ducks which grow up in very different environments .
12 Her book features 100 authentic recipes that can be conjured up in just 35 minutes from start to finish , including antipasti and starters — try ricotta-stuffed dates for an unusual appetiser — and pasta , risotto and other typically Italian main courses .
13 Netting can catch up in virtually everything .
14 It was very conventional , even old-fashioned , but its tensions built up in just the right way , and it gripped like a strangler 's hand .
15 It had a cast of virtual unknowns and failed to score highly in the ratings , with average viewing figures of only five million — although it had picked up in recently .
16 There 's a wonderful picture of the , body of a a women all curled up in today 's paper .
17 ITV 's new six-part series of Medics beginning on Tuesday March 31 puts the spotlight on the embattled doctors caught up in today 's troubled heath service .
18 increase goes to arts projects — the museums and galleries improvement schemes and other proposals that his Department funds — and is not caught up in too much bureaucracy .
19 From later Marxists comes the idea that individuals ' daily lives are caught up in quite distinct local forms of social relation .
20 ‘ For those children who get caught up in totally anti-social behaviour there is no point in just looking at the friendships .
21 it 'll probably twang back in again
22 As I said God did n't leave it like that , because God did in Jesus Christ what we could never do for ourselves , you see you and I at times we felt that I , I want to be different from that and we , and we pushed against one of these pressures and so that we pushed it out a wee bit , but as we 've pushed there it 's come back in somewhere else and as we 've stopped pushing and we 've gone to another bit so that first that has become , has come back as it was and we spend our lives perhaps running around trying to get the circle back again , it 's an impossible task , we ca n't do it , we spend our whole lives in the frustration things and we , and we start blaming on things , if only that situation was different , if only those circumstances were different , but it 's far , far , far more fundamental than that and we 've got ta come to the place where we say well I ca n't do any thing about it , I 've tried my hardest , but I ca n't do it , and that 's where God comes and says hang on a minute I 'll do it for you and that 's what he did in Jesus Christ , he did for us what we could n't do for ourselves , the bible tells us that Christ is the perfect image of God , it 's in Colossians one fifteen and just er full verses further on in verse nineteen it says in him all the fullness of God , in Jesus , all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell and so in Christ God 's son , God dealt with the problem of sin which had caused that twisting and that warping and that distortion , your life and in my life , that which spoiled his image in us he created us in his image , but you 've only got to look at people today , you 've only got to look at ourselves , see , where is the image of God , is that what God is like , jealous , filled with anger , bitterness , envy , is that what God is like , unclean thinking , is that what God is like that 's not his image , but he created us in his image perfect and what Jesus Christ did on the cross , is to restore that image , that original image in you and me , to recreate us in the image of God , so in
23 The book has come out in remarkably quick time , a great tribute to Ian Robertson , the editor , who must have beavered away ferociously .
24 She moved out for a while , but carried on cleaning for her ; and then when she married , she moved back in again , and had her first child there .
25 Pauline moved out and she moved back in again though did n't she ?
26 He regularly swam a mile or two out , surfed , and then swam back in again .
27 You want old Bombie to come back in here and give you some more of what Biff gave you today ?
28 In tests carried out in both Britain and the United States it has also been proved that non-smokers have far better memory and recall than smokers .
29 The restoration work , requested by the museum 's management with this exhibition in view , was carried out in just three months , at a cost of L560 million ( £259,000 ; $450.5 ) .
30 This method of organisation occurs when similar activities are carried out in widely different locations .
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