Example sentences of "[adv] [vb base] [adv prt] in " in BNC.

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1 It leaves me like a right fool out in the bloody open . ’
2 Irenius begins his account with an expression of anxiety which reveals a number of linked issues which constantly crop up in Spenser 's writing : the establishment and maintenance of true religion and civilisation within a pattern of human development predetermined by the divine .
3 ' I contend that these crowds spontaneously generate from microscopic spores which constantly drift about in our atmosphere , awaiting the perfect conditions in which to briefly flourish .
4 WC apps : 8 The Belgians tend to be ignored until they suddenly turn up in the latter stages of major tournaments — the final of the 1980 European Championship and the semi-finals of the last World Cup .
5 The ones able to secure ‘ sugar daddies ’ fooled the poor men into thinking that there was a Tiller rule that they only go out in twos and threes and so managed to get meals for their best friends as well .
6 Real owners might do the same thing but perhaps end up in a Relais & Chateaux hotel rather than the Place d'Italie .
7 Drawing once again on the detective genre , Pynchon complicates the linear hunt for information , partly by rendering every detail as ambiguous as possible and partly by having Oedipa literally go round in a huge circle when she is pursuing an ‘ underground ’ mail courier .
8 That 's why there are no solutions and the characters endlessly go around in circles in discussions .
9 All the nagging discontents that had accumulated after ten days together burst out in a series of rows that increased in intensity and duration as the evening wore on .
10 He seemed so fiercely shut up in himself that Ruth was afraid people would start seriously meaning it when they called him mad .
11 Just ponder for a moment the idea of persuading people to buy a product that they do n't need ( quite the reverse ) , which they then literally burn up in smoke and have to replace every single day .
12 He cried for the child , and for the crocuses , and was still moist-eyed when he heard the voices in the chamber suddenly rise up in rage .
13 But this good control , plus the fine grip and limited body roll , are badly let down in the driver appeal stakes by the steering .
14 They receive a child who has been badly let down in the past , who has to learn , painfully , how to care and trust again .
15 Two-thirds of my male friends have got married , and the rest of us just sit around in the pub all weekend .
16 They just sit up in their rooms and smoke hash and never speak to each other .
17 Inside these glass globes — part of what Henry James called " the thick detail of London life " — you can see lettering put there by the shop owners , and just make out in one globe the word TEA .
18 No matter where you finally wind up in the advertising business , you will want to work at some stage in an agency to gain real insight into advertising and acquire first-rate skills ( and , hopefully , reputation ) that puts wheels under your career .
19 A week out of Moscow across Siberia and five time zones later you somehow land up in landlocked Mongolia .
20 Oh I do n't see why you just sleep out in the garden or something
21 Needless to say , these mega-rich popsters just swan around in wellies every other weekend for the benefit of the colour supplements ‘ Day In The Life ’ features and leave all the actual farming to peasants who get up at dawn and get paid in potatoes .
22 We went a lot quicker than what we normally walk round in .
23 My job is to trap conspirators , plotters … not stumble around in the dark after some secret assassin . ’
24 they , they do n't know just walk around in the warehouse , they are
25 He had a carpet just put down in his lounge .
26 You know just look up in the dictionary
27 My God surely they do n't need ordinary people to have new words , they just look around in universities !
28 Well you just stand up in your row by your parents and you do n't go do n't come out onto the front or anything , just stand up when your name 's called , and then he addresses you and says , Do you sincerely want to receive the Sacrament of Confirmation ? and you say , I do .
29 Just wrap up in it , toga-style . ’
30 STROKE victim Bishop Edward Daly told the Belfast Telegraph : ‘ I just wake up in the mornings now and say ‘ Thank you God , for another day ’ . ’
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