Example sentences of "[pos pn] [noun] [vb base] in " in BNC.
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1 | I sensed , rather than heard , my mum come in . |
2 | In an earlier notebook , dated 10 March '97 , he recorded : My limbs fall in , tremble , yield , I am a wreck , even of what I was last Spring . |
3 | So that 's what he does and my father come in , put the milk by the door , knocked the door and me and Russell were still in bed fast asleep . |
4 | ‘ Would you have my secretary bring in coffee and find me fighting with my new PR consultant from London ? ’ |
5 | My Dad come in , there 's me running out while my Dad 's by the door in case one of them jumped I 'm so scared of spiders I hate them ! |
6 | When his wife becomes pregnant , he is confined to a room in the cellar while her parents move in upstairs . |
7 | Your starting point will be the sobering realisation that most babies ignore the expensive boxful of toys their parents invest in so hopefully , in favour of the much more exciting , and usually dangerous , object you happen to have in your hand . |
8 | Her lips pout around the filter and her cheeks collapse in as she draws deeply . |
9 | Their observations tie in closely with many findings of the sociology of work ; the aspects of housework that are cited as satisfying or dissatisfying have their parallels in the factory or office world . |
10 | and so on , every month their money is straight into the bank all their cheques come in straight into the bank so he 'll , you know , and I mean our pla , and the whole of the site nearly is let out for different people , you know , which is money coming in all the time |
11 | Diana 's three best pals are the women who shared her bachelor-girl pad in in Knightsbridge before she was married . |
12 | Its members move in and out of employment , and in and out of Nairobi itself , at a very fast rate . |
13 | The fifth is a work ethnography of Rochdale , focussing on an ethnographic explication of themes such as fragmentation and externalisation of elements of the labour process , casualisation of labour , and the complex ways in which households manage the different forms of work its members engage in . |
14 | The next day they should begin to start their spawning dance in and around the mops , the male driving the female into the spawning media scattering the non-adhesive eggs |
15 | She let the cooling suds tickle her wrists , worked her white-locked mop in and out of glasses . |
16 | The words are then assigned a rating based on the probability of the grammatical transitions that their tags participate in . |
17 | I am never sure how their inquiries fit in with that commitment . |
18 | The captain of the work party watched the woman and her son go in , then signalled to his men to complete the sealing-off of the cottage . |
19 | to the dung-hill harem where his claws sink in … |
20 | His shops rake in more money per square foot than most other British retailers . |
21 | Send it back immediately , or I 'll take it back for you — and punch his impertinent face in while I 'm at it ! ’ |
22 | He saw his wife come in to the room . |
23 | A number of his hymns remain in almost all hymn-books in English . |
24 | The poor girl was absolutely infatuated with him , not knowing that his tastes lie in quite a different direction . |
25 | There was two little boys come in his age come in |
26 | whenever his colleagues drop in |
27 | Yeah but I mean when our loads come in we 've got a chap here that p just purely cleans them . |
28 | Our eyes take in more information than any other of our senses . |
29 | Your readers take in , probably without stopping to think much about it , that they are being treated to a rather over-the-top descriptive passage , and they then " see without seeing " that dyed moustache . |
30 | Mind you , when our Daniel come in now and then to visit they thowt I was on me way out too , wi't dog-collar , and that , dog-collars in them places meaning Death … |