Example sentences of "[adv] [vb -s] in [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Gon na see how , per haps perhaps fits in with the other erm bits , so who 's starting off , you 're starting off are n't you ? |
2 | This column shows whether this module is available immediately on line ( ON LINE ) or only exists in off line storage ( OFFLINE ) . |
3 | This column shows whether this module is available immediately on line ( ON LINE ) or only exists in off line storage ( OFFLINE ) . |
4 | This column shows whether the module is available immediately on line ( ON ) or only exists in off line storage ( OFF ) . |
5 | This column shows whether the module is available immediately on line ( ON ) or only exists in off line storage ( OFF ) . |
6 | This column shows whether this module is available immediately on line ( ONLINE ) or only exists in off line storage ( OFFLINE ) . |
7 | This column shows whether this module is available immediately on line ( ON LINE ) or only exists in off line storage ( OFFLINE ) . |
8 | And you 'll find our billing methods are flexible enough for us to agree whichever best fits in with your existing accounting system and credit period preference . |
9 | The potential meaning of to with the infinitive can therefore be diagrammed in the following manner : The potential meaning of to as described above fits in with that of the bare infinitive in the following very simple way : the latter evokes that which defines the end-point of the movement denoted by to . |
10 | So zinc sulphate gets formed the zil the zinc just goes in in place of that H two . |
11 | It just goes in like that . |
12 | This is a marvellous opportunity for making a mirror that exactly blends in with the design and colour scheme of a particular room . |
13 | I think , so it just blends in with the border round |
14 | Faster than a machine gun , it can reach peak rates of 200 pulses per second as the bat finally closes in on the moving target . |
15 | When it finally pulls in to a kerb up a side street a hundred yards away , a voice supplies commentary from his second-floor window . |
16 | do , do let him know er because if we if we sort of know you know if , if , if a , if an essay just comes in off somebody we 've never met or something like that |
17 | If he ever goes in with Tyson , he could be taken for a foolish dog . |
18 | If he ever goes in with Tyson , he could be taken for a foolish dog . |
19 | He always ’ — again the hand was expressive — ‘ he always goes in on his way from the mill . |
20 | Erm I I I signed over I signed over a number of thousands of pounds erm n nine years ago , eight or nine years ago with regard to the matrimonial home which Alison still lives in with my son Ben today . |
21 | It 's different here , Léonie tried to explain : in our kitchen in London no one ever drops in for a chat . |
22 | Aye and what happens is , it usually starts in at the corner of your finger |
23 | Though it looks painfully obvious described so baldly , this scheme is wonderfully successful in dramatising the way in which life gradually closes in on Peter , driving him inexorably to madness and suicide . |
24 | ‘ Despite all the talk about Benn boxing behind his jab , he still rushes in with his head exposed and I will pick my counters just like Lennox Lewis did on Saturday . ’ |
25 | Brady was ordered to shed half a stone but still weighs in at 12 stone 8lb . |
26 | The hon. Gentleman always gives in to lobbies and should not have given in to that one . |
27 | I have n't seen him for a day or two , ’ said the girl , ‘ but he usually comes in about now . ’ |
28 | So what he does now he always comes in over the top , so every time you see John shake hands with anybody he 'll always do that and come in over the top actually I 'm in charge and he sort of er sort of stamps his authority on the individual . |
29 | ‘ By tradition the money always comes in at the end . |
30 | He also goes in for creative self-plundering by way of rhetorical and dialectical self-parody . |