Example sentences of "[vb base] in to [noun prp] " in BNC.
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1 | Tune in to Fred Friar on BBC Wiltshire Sound |
2 | Tune in to Richard Jackson on Radio 5 's Morning Edition every Saturday at 8.45am . |
3 | Tune in to Charles Patman on BBC Radio Peterborough . |
4 | Tune in to Derek Cox on BBC Radio Leicester . |
5 | There should be a car waitin' fur us at the airport when we get in to Lima . |
6 | The leaves may have been scorched by the salt in the wind , especially those strong winds that often blow in to Blackpool off the sea . |
7 | Very commonplace today go in to Thomas Cook 's there 'll be a video running continually with one destination or another or an activity holiday etcetera . |
8 | I mean people move in to Hayes specially so that their kids can go there . |
9 | That 's right , yes , I run the Search Room there , which means that erm people come in to Pelham House , they usually meet me at a desk on the end of a telephone and I put them onto the documents that they want to look at and I make sure they 're ordered up from where they 're kept in one of the various repositories and strongrooms that we 've got , and then I produce them for them and erm if they need any help reading them and so on I give them that . |
10 | John Calambokidis , who runs the non-profit marine-mammal organisation Cascadia Research , based in nearby Olympia , says that 1991 was the year that his team saw the most whales come in to Puget Sound , and stay the longest . |
11 | Do you know as you come in to Salisbury and you have to keep going on with the traffic , then it leads up to the bridge where the wa , where the river is . |
12 | He laughs forlornly and , as we pull in to Lowestoft station , tells me , in hushed conspiratorial tones , this riddle , popular among his colleagues on the Aberdeen run : |