Example sentences of "[adv] in [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 His underwear will be perfectly all right in with the other clothes .
2 And if you 've ever been there and taken the trip on the little boat which takes you right in to the base of the falls themselves , you 'll have seen that there 's a hydro electric station which takes power from the water at night , when some of the force is diverted , and instead of the water going over the falls it goes through the hydro electric station .
3 On a couple of goals Dorigo had been dragged right in beyond the centre of the pitch , with the other defenders no-where , and where did Speed get to , it is part of his job to help/cover the left back .
4 The late sun setting over the mainland lays a bright path over the water , coming right in at the small bay .
5 ‘ It came right in through the window .
6 Using hand-woven ropes — the Singphos do not trust any catching gear they have not made themselves — they ride their trained elephants right in among the herd .
7 These comfortable apartments , reserved exclusively for Club 18–30 , are an ideal base for those who want to be right in amongst the action , being only two minutes from the shops , bars and nightlife of San An .
8 The ‘ Sean Astin digs up a caveman and he fits right in in the Valley ’ plot does n't add to the suburban dumbnation routines but rather reworks the Eighties ' ‘ innocents abroad in America ’ genre ( eg anything from Starman to Crocodile Dundee ) .
9 Somewhere in between the two , really .
10 The true model is probably somewhere in between the two .
11 It gives me great pleasure to announce that that would mean Cherwell District Council would have to disappear as well , and that would be another blip off the horizon erm but that what would happen you would therefore have a smaller authority , who would then become the Education Authority , and that would be would have to be , I think , somewhere in between the current District Council size in Cherwell or the Vale , of what about a hundred thousand , and the present county , which is rather more than half a million .
12 If he loses both he will still want to hang on in for the three autumn World Cup games in which England 's fate is still in his own hands .
13 Get off , cross over again and come on in to the Meinhof .
14 Gradually , as she lingered over her coffee , the sky became an indigo canopy and a thick layer of cloud moved stealthily in from the Adriatic to obscure the moon and blot out the stars .
15 The day before our return , as we looked out over the battlements , we saw a succession of thick black clouds driving slowly in over the sand flats and camel grass .
16 Only in about the last quarter of the century did colour printing , in the form of chromolithographs , become at all usual ; and for expensive books , hand-colouring remained the norm well into the twentieth century .
17 On only in like the the rehearsals and , like the actual gig and
18 As you go deeper in towards the centre laboratory you pass through progressively cleaner bio-medical zones , starting here with a shower .
19 Slowly they worked their way deeper in to the forest .
20 It became known that we were perilously short of hay because the haytiming on our pastures had been very poor that summer and it was impossible to bring enough in on the horse-drawn sledge on the few occasions we were able to get out .
21 Yea o Yes er there was no clutch , only something you could erm it was sort of a forked iron er over the strap , and then you had a a long plank in in above the chaff cutter , that was the most dangerous thing .
22 we went up there with the dogs and let them in in to the burrow .
23 Because , although it 's before nine erm , the next morning erm you 're actually giving them now more lead time , you 've given them another day because an , sometime tomorrow you know , if it gets there at two o'clock and it 's off-loading in in in at the bay and someone checks that it 's been received and then someone makes a phone call to tell them it 's there , and then they 're doing something else , and then they come down and have a look at it , how many boxes do you think are sitting on loading bays that do n't get looked at for a day or two , or three , or four , five when they 've had a next day service ?
24 We had a little garden in the front and we used to put er a in in in the in in on the soil and we used to put some crumbs on on a on a plate you know .
25 Erm carry all the water from a shaft in the bottom of the field for all the the animals as well in in into the and all the pigs and the calves .
26 So again we see a split in the er in in in amongst the great powers .
27 The tide was rising : it came filtering gently in through the salt-marsh vegetation , washing up the beach and receding , leaving ribbons of foam along the sand .
28 That by putting it in the middle of the other side , he clipped the pallet again the opposite side and that also went down in between the racks and dropped on the pallet below it .
29 We dropped down in to the trench and Tony produced a couple of tins of Compo rations .
30 Which car did Nigel go down in on the Thursday ? ’
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