Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] in to [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | I ca n't believe they 're just gon na leave me to go in to English on my own . |
2 | So I got in to Gib n as an apprentice on the second of August , nineteen twelve I think . |
3 | I phoned in to work and asked ? |
4 | ‘ Well , the housemaid said something to me before I came in to prayers , and that just tickled me and I could n't help it . ’ |
5 | Should I too give Jacob my maidservant , Zilpah , or should I give in to Rachel ? |
6 | I remember that morning in particular because I still had it on when I went in to school . |
7 | And then on Thursday I went in to work and I had had enough . |
8 | I went in to Mum . |
9 | And so I wrote in to Radio Brighton , and Doctor Wisbey very kindly saw my son and confirmed that he was , in fact , dyslexic . |
10 | Let's imagine somebody wonders in to John Major one day and he says you know , I 've a bit of a problem John . |
11 | If more would have gone back then the strike would have come to an end quicker cos , I thought more would have gone back then , but all the lads in they stayed out and nobody went in to work . |
12 | She sensed he was pretending to be asleep when she got in to bed . |
13 | Could we go back and perhaps you tell me , erm what it felt like , for example cooking a meal or doing the washing in a Nissan hut and the difference of when you came in to Chipping Field |
14 | This AE recalls a sales manager who tuned in to AEs ' telephone conversations , thereby gaining snippets of information about their private lives which he would not hesitate to use . |
15 | If you give in to bullying and threats then the bully wins and ‘ Wrong ’ has defeated ‘ Right ’ . |
16 | When I met her at the airport after she flew in to London from Los Angeles recently , I caught my breath when I saw her because she just looked so lovely . |
17 | The regulations , which will affect new care home residents after April , mean those residents who go in to hospital for treatment will receive the new ‘ residential allowance ’ for only six days . |
18 | So how , how do you get in to campus then ? |
19 | Afraid she might doze off if she gave in to temptation and lay down on the bed , she sat down instead on the room 's only chair , and picked up a book , absorbing not a single word as she waited for the sounds that would mean he was turning in for the night . |
20 | Weakly , she gave in to temptation . |
21 | 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 . |
22 | It was only as we came in to Maidstone and I started looking for Hospital signs that I began to suffer the nervous Whirling Pits way down in my stomach . |
23 | Actually , are we going in to Marks again tomorrow ? |
24 | There should be a car waitin' fur us at the airport when we get in to Lima . |
25 | I only just caught the train , and when , a quarter of an hour later , we pulled in to Lochgair , and I should have got my bag and quit the Sprinter and walked to the house and finally have talked — sober , and not in the context of a game of Alternative Charades — to my father , and apologised , and spent the three hours until the next Glasgow train with my mother and father in some longed-for spirit of reconciliation , I did nothing of the sort . |
26 | ‘ Well , when we went in to prayers , I burst out laughing : I never saw anyone so ugly . |
27 | Well we went in to Asda this morning when did we go in , ? we could n't get into and it was empty . |
28 | Then we went in to Hamish and Tone 's for tea and apologies , and later drove to the castle for what would have been the most excruciating interval of my life if Verity and Lewis had still been there , but they were n't ; they had taken off in the car to visit some friends of Verity 's who lived in Ardnamurchan , and would n't be back until late tomorrow at the earliest . |
29 | 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 : |
30 | ‘ Do you expect God to hold back the tide for us to float here all day , then , or do we turn in to Duart ? ’ |