Example sentences of "[verb] in on [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Sit in on one of my lessons .
2 You see when Steve used to erm come down to Selby I mean there were , there were occasions when I used to go into the college with him and sit in on some of his interviews .
3 By the time ‘ Cobweb Soup ’ grinds in on thin guitar it 's already too late , as curiously gets the better of you .
4 By the time ‘ Cobweb Soup ’ grinds in on thin guitar it 's already too late , as curiously gets the better of you .
5 Who actually sits in on these video meetings .
6 Yet , embittered pigeons have a great tendency to come home to roost at a later date , wreaking merry havoc as they zoom in on perceived injustices and ensure that all and sundry realise the iniquities of their previous employer .
7 Zoom in on this bungalow
8 ‘ If Lennox does n't learn to crouch and get his right hand up more , Ruddock will zoom in on that and it is going to be all over .
9 Can you zoom in on that window then ?
10 You can zoom in on any area of the design by positioning a BOX around that area .
11 Here senior police officers sit in a windowless room , facing a bank of video-monitors and operating , by remote control , TV cameras which can zoom in on any area of the terraces or stands .
12 The youth of Port Talbot were broken in on great drama and fired , from the beginning , to reach for the sky .
13 As I say the problem with the tucking in on that one is there 's not quite such a lot of length .
14 After the show the band chill out in the car park , meeting Carpettes from around 16 , who got in on borrowed ID , to those in their mid-20s sucking on roaches who have just heard about the band along with The Charlatans UK ( ! ) and want their logo in felt tip on a T-shirt .
15 Garages cash in on chipped windscreens
16 Three cash in on bright ideas
17 We have exhibitions at Sandown , Bristol , Leeds , Glasgow — obviously the machines cash in on this and have their own conventions in various parts of the country .
18 Because he 'd been seeing psychiatrists since 1950 he fancied he was an expert on Freud and wanted to sit in on all our discussions .
19 With this kind of work in mind , I obtained permission from the headteacher and the governors to sit in on all appointments that occurred in Bishop McGregor School during my fieldwork between 1983 and 1985 .
20 They can cash in on good ideas from staff and benefit from many small improvements and occasional large leaps forward .
21 Can you cash in on unwanted space or possessions ?
22 The one-sided affair ought to have seen the hosts cash in on early superiority , even before Booth struck in the 31st minute to break the deadlock with a well-placed glancing header off Darren Ferguson 's corner .
23 They are only too painfully aware how they could cash in on any multi-coloured shirt worn by one of Europe 's best known goalkeepers .
24 And if you want to collect ready made salad type things from M&S I am sure you can eat in on some evenings by arrangement , depending on our social plans .
25 By 1980 the operation was clearly prospering , bringing in on average £2500 per week in the second half of the year .
26 So people have rung in on this direct line to find out what 's going on and things appertaining that could be useful to them .
27 Deborah Levy drops in on Canadian maestro Robert Lepage , suspended between worlds in his solo show
28 Old time pro Brad Bowman drops in on this year 's comp and shows good stylish skating , unlike Davross who amazed visiting US skaters Lance Mountain , John Lucero , Steve Keenan and Spidey with his unstylish but entertaining hang-ups ( yeah Jase ) .
29 and then it homes in on one of the men right and it goes sort of whee one hour later whee whee bom bom bom and the other one goes one hour later right and the computer just explodes and it just goes boom
30 I had joined a group who are still fixated on a classification of ‘ disorder ’ which homes in on those who attack property , ; and since the amassing of property has been a primary aim of capitalist society , it should come as no surprise to find that to prevent the dispossessed from simply taking from the élite has been the primary structuring principle of policing .
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