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

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1 SHe had eventually given in to a desire to seek Tammuz out , even though SHe already recognised the signs which meant he wanted to be left alone .
2 Oliver was gently carried in to a bed , and received more care and kindness than he had ever had in his life .
3 And then there was the attempt not to issue a questionnaire to every household but to reserve the questionnaires in the Town Hall for four week days Saturdays to will honour the people who did n't actually have Friday who were at home perhaps walk in to the City Centre you might be able to pick one of these up and then there was the problem distrib in distributing the questionnaire because despite of the assurance given to the consultants they were nevertheless distributed amongst the numerous St Albans and believe you me even those likely people who did go to the press do sometimes for every that we having suddenly fully congressed to see whether perhaps there might be a consultation questionnaire lurking within it .
4 I knew she had psychic gifts , but I could not work out how she was so clued in to this film .
5 As Crick points out , however , the right idea can only fit in to a mind which is trained , and predisposed to accept that idea .
6 Too much packed in to a short time .
7 He seemed so attentive , so clued in to my every word , that I suddenly found the confidence to go on .
8 These three members of the Procellariidae family have one thing in common : they are all ‘ night birds ’ , only coming in to the screes and grassy slopes of the cliffs under cover of darkness to change places with their mate on the single egg , deep within a burrow , or later to feed the young .
9 The original building of the Hotel Lapershoek dates back to the early 20th century when it was a grand stately home , and it has since been thoughtfully converted in to a very comfortable four star hotel .
10 ‘ We knew the water was dangerous and had only gone in to our knees .
11 We 'll all go in to the one .
12 ‘ I expect to come out of these games with good results , ’ said Atkinson , before warning about hidden pitfalls in the long run in to the finishing line .
13 The outcome may well depend on who copes best with the long run in to polling day .
14 Few organisations , though , are better wired in to City Hall than the municipal labour unions .
15 Whether they 're the citizens ' charter , whether they are response to people from the press or from the public or constantly ringing in to the switchboard , or whether it 's by all the other ways in which we disseminate information .
16 And she was so hooked in to him that she sensed that changing of mood almost immediately , and the façade split open a little wider .
17 One effect of this strategy was to create a large number of internal refugees — some reports estimating that some 150,000 Cambodians were displaced during 1990 , either by being forcibly moved in to the interior by SOC troops , or by fleeing from Khmer Rouge attack .
18 ‘ Even though PDAG is not to be abolished until next April , it seems members have already given in to the Tories .
19 Having prohibited party politics on the grounds that it fostered corruption , patronage and tribalism , Rawlings had finally given in to domestic and international pressure for a return to multiparty politics .
20 And , I think he just moved in to Muriel 's next door .
21 Imagine you have just moved in to a new flat .
22 It was in 1982 that TMAM finally moved in to the airfield , taking over two pre-fabricated huts that had been part of the Station in the late 1940s and early 1950s .
23 Diana soon moved in to rooms at Buckingham Palace where she , her mother and a small team had to organize her wedding and her wardrobe .
24 In addition , many other categories of workers in the formal and informal sectors in all three worlds have been progressively drawn in to the global capitalist system by the simple expedient of severely restricting and in more and more cases absolutely destroying their prospects for selfsufficiency in the provision of food , shelter and other ‘ necessities ’ of life .
25 Now do you think anybody who was n't already tied in to that wanted to get tied in at that time ? ’
26 The case was solved when Downey finally walked in to a police station earlier this year and confessed to the killing .
27 You 're just on the approaches to Jerusalem , you 're just coming in to Jerusalem right ?
28 This is just giving in to your Ego , which loves to play ‘ Ai n't I awful ! ’
29 She 'd just walked in to the nearest doorway and spilled the whole thing to a complete stranger .
30 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 .
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