Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [adv prt] [to-vb] in " in BNC.

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1 When it 's just a few minutes from the face , the thick cloud filling the valley gently wells up to lock in the cold .
2 I concede that the current recession and the Government 's mismanagement of the economy have a part to play in the fact that prestige projects are not lining up to locate in the bay .
3 ‘ It has n't been any good for you , ’ her mother looked about to be certain Joseph was not with earshot even thought he had just gone off to fish in the lake , ‘ all this … ’ she added , unnecessarily , casting an accusing look in the direction of the inn parlour .
4 They were not setting out to trade in gramophone records .
5 Will it not turn out to reside in a strange mixture of particle-like and wave-like behaviour ?
6 ‘ Most of Zagreb 's Serbs probably came out to vote in Croatia 's referendum because they were scared , ’ said a Serb historian .
7 A public relations campaign also started up to draw in the waverers .
8 The purchase of the Stockholm group already means that more than 60% of Wolters Kluwer 's activities are now outside the Netherlands , an objective that the company had originally set out to achieve in 1994 .
9 She was n't sure just how she felt , but she retained enough control to know that she could n't give in to shock in front of fitzAlan .
10 But the language your correspondent then goes on to use in her letter belies her true position — that of a supporter of the status quo and of the present head teacher .
11 Moses then goes out to pray in the desert .
12 The Land Rover pulled into the ambulance unloading bay at the hospital and then moved off to wait in the staff car park while Donaldson took Mrs Balanchine to the men 's ward .
13 I carried on , then came back to live in the North but it just seems to have been a really cemented bond . ’
14 And then going on to say in doing that you 've got to be violent .
15 She waited for a moment and then walked off to stand in a different part of the ship .
16 Nick stayed at Muirfield for a morning press conference next day and then flew down to play in a charity pro-am .
17 We need , therefore , to understand the relationship of gospel to culture in general terms , and then go on to examine in detail its engagement with the specific culture in which we are involved .
18 He would rise early , make himself tea on his landlady 's stove , work for three hours with a pause for breakfast , then go out to walk in Regent 's Park , unless it was raining .
19 Well , I remember Strawberry Alarm Clock , a bunch of psychedelic nutters from Santa Barbara , who had a massive hit with ‘ Incense and Peppermint ’ in 1967 and then went on to appear in the Psych-Out movie .
20 After about 100,000 years or so , the needle of the compass would abruptly become unstable and then swing round to face in the opposite direction , so that what was once compass north would become compass south , and vice versa .
21 He wondered if Eileen would ever again come back to live in Liverpool .
22 We met a number of young field-workers and others who had recently come back to work in Lewis and Harris , and were most impressed by their ability and devotion .
23 It seems businesses have never set out to choose in a deliberate and disciplined way which technique or techniques are likely to be the most effective , given the circumstances and the resources available .
24 Banbridge was receiving 13lb from Clever Folly but as the winner subsequently went on to triumph in the A F Budge Gold Cup at Cheltenham , breaking the track record in the process , there is little wrong with the form .
25 Born of parents who mixed three heritages between them African , Hispanic and Chinese he grew up in Cuba and subsequently went on to live in Spain , Italy , Mexico and the United States , stopping long enough in France in the late Thirties to be bouleversé by Surrealism , and by Picasso 's ‘ Les Demoiselles d'Avignon ’ in particular .
26 I was very put out to read in your article on Rachel Friend , her answer to the question : ‘ What do you think you 'll be like when you 're 60 ? ’
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