Example sentences of "[verb] in for [art] " in BNC.

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1 Is n't the phrase just meaningless , flung in for the rhythm , meaning no more than ‘ by pillar or by post ’ , ‘ by night or by day ’ , ‘ by hook or by crook ’ ?
2 The star of the festival is Hans Rey … a stunt rider who can do anything and everything with a mountain bike … he 's been flown in for the classic …
3 The star of the festival is Hans Rey … a stunt rider who can do anything and everything with a mountain bike … he 's been flown in for the classic …
4 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 .
5 Only got in for a few minutes as half the church was there .
6 With the game going into added time Michael Galwey , after good work by Geoghegan , Clarke and Bradley , got in for an Irish try .
7 MEMBERS of LASMO Nova Scotia 's relative response team recently checked in for a flying visit around the Halifax international heliport .
8 Our jolly attendant makes one more and final round , checking that we are all tucked in for the night .
9 However , on Saturday , October 10 , it is pencilled in for a proposed Newcastle to Maryport via Leeds , Skipton and Workington special , returning to Bradford Forster Square .
10 UB may be pencilled in for a show in the King 's Hall on January
11 He is also in the chair for the second single , due in May , and the debut album which is pencilled in for an August release .
12 And it 's being pencilled in for the weekend after Wigan are due to defend their world sevens title in Sydney on February 5-7 .
13 Although they have been pencilled in for the Cymru Alliance next season , Llani have faint hopes of winning a reprieve if a present club pulls out of the Konica League .
14 He was hustled away by some of the extra police officers drafted in for the case .
15 The Defence Minister barely flinched as the camera zoomed in for a close-up of his face as they ran the famous film clip from mid-December , 1987 , in which he promised that it would all be over by Christmas .
16 The Defence Minister barely flinched as the camera zoomed in for a close-up of his face as they ran the famous film clip from mid-December , 1987 , in which he promised that it would all be over by Christmas .
17 There are no hotel bills , they chip in for the petrol and food and everybody 's happy . ’
18 Collecting her ticket , she came up behind him again as he checked in for the flight .
19 They yesterday found out which rating band their houses had been placed in for the new tax , which starts next April .
20 I 'd like to go in for a bit , but there 's loads of people in there and I ai n't got no washing to do .
21 Firemen were called to the river Taff in Llandaff to rescue Eric , a 10-stone Irish Wolfhound who had got into deep water after deciding to go in for a swim .
22 ‘ The players have to be prepared to put themselves into dangerous positions , to go in for a hard tackle , be brave and take the blows .
23 It 's easier for you to experiment to see how it works than for me to go in for a detailed but boring explanation .
24 One of my other SCOTTISH OFFICE contacts has asked me to go in for a sandwich lunch on Wednesday ( 25th ) , which is kind .
25 You need the permission of the owner to go in for a title search so you 'd have to know the owner first .
26 She had been accepted for the job at Ardis & Co , looking the way she normally looked , but if to keep her job — and she had no idea at that stage whether there was a Vasey junior , or similar , at G Vasey Ltd — she had to go in for a bit of de glamorisation , then so be it .
27 The National Lottery will be the enemy of proper planning in all areas ; it will encourage short-term thinking , and it will be the perfect excuse for the Treasury to go in for the kind of sleight-of-hand just described .
28 Like a car needs to go in for the M O T , you 've got ta
29 I mean given that you 've got a , oh I do n't know , a pound you 're going to spend a week in gambling entertainment , if I could put it that way , you 'd do better to go in for the pools , because if you did have a win you might have a big one , than to put it on a horse — am I right ?
30 He goes in for a sort of hall-of-mirrors self-impersonation , telling people how he would have done the murder if he had done it ( which he has ) .
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