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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Then a Leed rang up saying that he was there and that the particular aviatical chant in question had been initially struck up by the away end , and only joined in by a shameful minority ( ahem ) of Leeds fans .
2 Yet last autumn Christie 's sold another ‘ canal houses ’ garniture , perhaps popped in by the Vietnamese just to test the water , for a mere Dfl28,000 ( £8,484 ) .
3 The reader is always aware that although he knows and mostly likes the people he is writing about , he is not necessarily taken in by their ideas .
4 The vogue for this owed much to a bastard Darwinism ; Latin nations were less taken in by it than were Slavs and Teutons .
5 Before the introduction of the Kodak camera in 1888 , travel photography was usually only indulged in by professionals or serious amateurs .
6 Before the introduction of the Kodak camera in 1888 , travel photography was usually only indulged in by professionals or serious amateurs .
7 I persuaded a friend of mine to visit the summit one evening and he was so taken in by the view that he stepped back from the trig point and disappeared over the edge of the crag that crowns the top .
8 But Britain will be able to keep its rebate on contributions to the EC — allowing us to claw back £2 billion of the £4.5 billion annually paid in by the Treasury .
9 Three who did were Edith and Egbert Rose and Auguste , almost forcibly pushed in by a desperate Mr Multhrop .
10 Is the top , I mean I broke , had to get in my own house when I locked myself out once when I 'd been in the garden and I , I just got in by leaning through the top window and opening the bottom window , so now I always lock the bottom windows , I do n't bother locking the top one I open it
11 She is a writer , not delighted in by everybody , who plainly finds what fires her imagination is considering people who go beyond the ordinary bounds .
12 Best bought in by the load , it becomes expensive when stacked , composted , mixed with a little poultry , bagged up and given a fancy proprietary name .
13 This power can be exercised only in cases where the application is not called in by the secretary of state himself .
14 Even if the loan is not called in by the investors , there are likely to be other implications .
15 Somewhat surprising is the fact that the longest hours are not put in by the women with the largest number of children .
16 Thomas was quaking with giggles like a girl , but Harry would never again be so easily taken in by that , after this experience .
17 Hall 's penalty was finally knocked in by Owen Pickard …
18 Hall 's penalty was finally knocked in by Owen Pickard …
19 She felt utterly hemmed in by the panelled walls adorned with religious pictures , crucifixes , statues and ornate candlesticks .
20 And with the aid of the wind got an awful lot of distance on that kick and almost earned side a corner , it was only just kept in by his opposite number Tommy Wright .
21 Gemmell just kept in by Crosby and it comes again to Gemmell .
22 A B and C licences and er it got so complicated that er I er eventually drafted in by virtue of er being able to sell firewood , er drafted into the C I S , the Co-op insurance .
23 Across at 20/562 is the Buquoy Palace , once lived in by the widow of Count Karel Buquoy , a general of the Imperial troops at the Battle of the White Mountain in 1620 .
24 The finale includes a cunningly constructed canon during which Ferrando , still heartbroken , at first refuses to take part , until he is gradually drawn in by the others .
25 At the new master 's decree , today was to be a day of merrymaking : workers from his nearby shoe factory had been specially brought in by charabanc , and a syndicate of local industrialists had also gathered for the festivities .
26 The point , though , is not that his poetry exceeds the truth but that it fails to keep up with the truth , since it can not fully express the Friend 's merits : No one was ever taken in by Shakespeare 's disclaimers of ability , and few people will imagine that , whoever the Friend was — if indeed there was a real-life Friend — Shakespeare has failed to do justice to him ; if anything , rather the opposite .
27 But the play , because it wants its bread buttered on both sides , keeps its options open until the end on the issue of whether she is genuinely taken in by her husband 's lie or whether her insistence that the girl stay the weekend , her broody concern for the future of the fictitious baby , and marriage-broking on behalf of Julie are just ways of stoking up Jacques 's embarrassment .
28 Entering St Jude 's Passage — her most direct approach to St Jude 's Square and the old market place which would lead her to Miss Dallam 's side of Frizingley — Cara was at once hemmed in by tall houses as sinister and insubstantial as shadows , tottering almost beneath a weight of sheer dilapidation and the load of displaced humanity they carried .
29 Nowadays a flight of fifteen minutes in an ‘ Islander ’ aircraft makes life a lot easier for sufferers from mal-de-mer — visitors and islanders alike — although all heavy supplies still come in by sea .
30 But the main force of transports , along with the fleet intended to escort it , was still hemmed in by Hawkes 's blockade .
  Next page