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

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1 Xanthe ambled in in a tousled yawning state and yesterday 's clothes and flopped into the empty chair beside Filmer .
2 Deputy Head brought child into school and was dealing with the incident in his office when the child 's Class Teacher burst in in a frenzied manner shouting that this was what she did n't want to happen and the child was getting too much attention .
3 Carol Gilligan , in In a Different Voice : Psychological Theory and Women 's Development ( 1982 ) , examines psychological theories concerning human moral development , and suggests that a male model has been developed which does not fit the experiences of most women 's lives .
4 We 'll be sending one of our own men in in a few minutes . ’
5 The way that we 've found it in this this year 's Liberal Democrat Conference was to actually put forward the suggestion that Regional Government could be brought in in a flexible sense .
6 I very much regret that both the Syrians and the Lebanese stayed away from the multilaterals and that , although present , the Palestinians did not join in in a positive way .
7 The Marine Commandos were well dug in in a wooded area just off the road and close to the village .
8 that to him when the Celtic red mist 's before his eyes and he 's kicking your head in in a jealous rage , he thought .
9 ‘ I wonder if these councillors realise that anglers are among the people who vote them in in the first place , and who they are supposed to serve ? , ’ he asked .
10 ‘ We should have turned Jack Stone in in the first place and let the Met boys worry about protecting the family . ’
11 ‘ What I ca n't understand , ’ the Archdeacon went on , ‘ is why Dersingham put Marr in in the first place . ’
12 Now Mill realizes that the objection to this is the last problem coercion , that if people 's votes are known , then some people might be able to put pressure on others to vote one way rather than another and as I said why the secret ballot was brought in in the first place .
13 No , it 's the ones who bring them in , who brought them in in the first place — ’
14 To think about this , we now have to relax one of the restrictions that I built into the computer game : we shall end by seeing why I built that restriction in in the first place .
15 And why did you climb in in the first place ? ’
16 In the 1980s much was achieved in the economy and many essential and fundamental changes had to be made after the IMF was called in in the late 1970s when Labour was in power .
17 If a claim comes in in the normal sequence of events and our adjudicating officers are asked to adjudicate , that is one matter .
18 The work that had been put in in the past year was now showing results and he was absolutely confident that the spirit that had animated the society , the progressive feeling and the strong loyalty would continue throughout London .
19 Naked Gun star Leslie Nielsen is back on another mind-boggling trail in search of no-one-ever-knows-what as bumbling Lt. Frank Drebin in in the latest series of Red Rock cider adverts .
20 He headed in in the 31st minute after Wright 's centre had taken a deflection , then scored from the penalty spot after being brought down by Bennett .
21 Windows emulation and AppleTalk , LU6.2 and NetWare interoperability technologies will be detailed in in the fourth quarter , while an interapplication communication facility to compete against Windows NT should be unveiled in the second quarter of 1994 .
22 Wind/U , a complete set of Windows APIs operating under Motif that Bristol wrote , is currently in beta and will ship in in the fourth quarter priced at $50,000 per product license .
23 Compare the description of the agony in In the Same boat ( a story the end of which is truer to the experience than i– the end of The Brushwood Boy ) : ‘ Suppose you were a violin string — vibrating — and someone put his finger on you ’ with the image of the ‘ banjo string drawn tight ’ for the breaking wave in The finest Story in the World .
24 A child was brought in in the last stages of diphtheria .
25 Although she had never read any of his books , she was well aware of the high regard he was held in in the literary world .
26 Markby ‘ did the honours ’ and settled down in a vast , chintz-covered , feather-cushioned armchair .
27 Presently , as he sat by himself in a remote corner of the banqueting hall , he noticed on the wall beside him an ascending column of white ants ; as they reached the ceiling they spread their wings and slowly drifted down in a delicate living veil .
28 The different sorts of Goblins can do this in different ways but the objective is the same : either attack an enemy unit and bog it down in a protracted combat , or stand in the way of an enemy unit to prevent it attacking your core units .
29 He sat down in a vacant chair and at once the younger cadet hurried to serve him with tea from a spotless samovar .
30 For statistics alone are unlikely to stop a 17-year-old putting his foot down in a lethal weapon .
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