Example sentences of "[adv prt] in [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 The commercial procedure of dégorgement crept in in gradual steps sometime in the latter part of the eighteenth century , or soon after , and might have been the producers ' response to an increasing number of complaints about their clouded wines .
2 Except that she 's got to clock in in five minutes time .
3 The British Technology Group , formed by a merger of the National Enterprise Board and the National Research Development Council , has invested in in small firms in electronics .
4 He gets all over the pitch , and I could see him fitting in in all kinds of areas , he used to be good for Spurs even when the defence came under pressure , and he 'd tackle back , becoming the ball winner .
5 Originally it was planned to bring the tax in in two stages starting with an eight per cent rise and then moving up to the full seventeen and a half .
6 Third , there should be a competition tribunal , which would be brought in in two circumstances .
7 At the moment the EMG pickups on the Petersen have a good clean sound , if a little clanky on the top end , but my ideal would be where you had a bass with a thousand different possibilities and you could just slot them in in two seconds flat !
8 Says journalist Salim Muwakkil of Chicago paper in In These Times , ‘ This ‘ rap gap ’ reflects a growing divide within the African-American community .
9 They may come in in little pieces , but if the pieces can be stuck together the results usually show inside of their first forty-eight hours .
10 The square brackets in ( 62 ) merely mark that the whole is to be taken as a complex entity , which is given anyway by our assumption that an E extended remains an E ; if the brackets are not needed in ( 61 ) why are they present in ( 62 ) ; alternatively , why not write them in in both cases ?
11 The re-establishment of the Irish language as the first official language of the state became the national policy of the Irish government under de Valera and has only toned down in recent years .
12 But it has kept its head down in recent years because of a huge $4 billion corporate debt and a slide in sales .
13 I mean , ranking of the countries descending as business in the way it changes , and Japan comes first , Germany 's gone down in recent years because of that trouble , but America has consistently been the major investor in this country .
14 Lawrence said the team had to deliver for fans who had been let down in recent years .
15 The first thing to do is get up as quickly as possible , so practise falling down in all directions and jumping up again as fast as you can — until the whole movement becomes automatic .
16 Certainly in the class-room those from two feet to two feet only go straight up and down in all changements , soubresauts and entrechats with both legs fully extended at the height of the jump .
17 Cohesion through antonymy ( " oppositeness ' ) is also created in the text through the juxtaposition of the verb phrases 'stand up " and 'sitting down in adjacent sentences ( h ) and ( b ) .
18 Over 100 homes of Aristide supporters were burnt down in rural areas .
19 It would not be sensible for anyone other than staff with specific responsibilities in this area to get weighed down in mechanical details such as costing the specific details of any aspect of the school 's plans .
20 Any use of nuclear weapons which resulted in significant fall-out coming down in neutral countries , or which in other ways violated neutral territory , would clearly fall foul of this provision .
21 CalMac 's managing director , Colin Paterson , points out that his is possibly the only nationalised industry whose grant has gone down in real terms .
22 That constancy of composition relationship breaks down in enclosed seas and bays for example where er addition processes , I E er salts which have been eroded from river water , may alter the composition .
23 Above us , a massive chandelier in sugar-doll pink cascades down in frilly waves .
24 Our regiment had a very fine cellar , laid down in Victorian days , and it had to be abandoned .
25 Greig won the toss but England then batted poorly , scraping their way to 197 in the first day , although only 80.4 overs were sent down in six hours , Close 's 60 being the best effort .
26 Peter Defty , of Stoneham , scored a remarkable win for Hampshire after being five down in six holes .
27 Often , as the night drew on , a number of people were seen to lie down in odd places , both in Partisan Street and on the Embankment .
28 They will be ready for November , before the government grant settlement arrives , and work will begin in the finance officer 's department paring them down in bilateral discussions .
29 A similar paper on radio- telescopes is now bogged down in legal proceedings , initiated by members of the Advisory Board for the Research Councils .
30 Secondly , the paper on radio astronomy is not ‘ now bogged down in legal proceedings ’ .
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