Example sentences of "[adv] in [prep] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | And if you 've ever been there and taken the trip on the little boat which takes you right in to the base of the falls themselves , you 'll have seen that there 's a hydro electric station which takes power from the water at night , when some of the force is diverted , and instead of the water going over the falls it goes through the hydro electric station . |
2 | On a couple of goals Dorigo had been dragged right in beyond the centre of the pitch , with the other defenders no-where , and where did Speed get to , it is part of his job to help/cover the left back . |
3 | ‘ It came right in through the window . |
4 | Using hand-woven ropes — the Singphos do not trust any catching gear they have not made themselves — they ride their trained elephants right in among the herd . |
5 | These comfortable apartments , reserved exclusively for Club 18–30 , are an ideal base for those who want to be right in amongst the action , being only two minutes from the shops , bars and nightlife of San An . |
6 | The ‘ Sean Astin digs up a caveman and he fits right in in the Valley ’ plot does n't add to the suburban dumbnation routines but rather reworks the Eighties ' ‘ innocents abroad in America ’ genre ( eg anything from Starman to Crocodile Dundee ) . |
7 | Come on in for a cup of tea … " |
8 | Get off , cross over again and come on in to the Meinhof . |
9 | The day before our return , as we looked out over the battlements , we saw a succession of thick black clouds driving slowly in over the sand flats and camel grass . |
10 | So he was only in for a couple of days then ? |
11 | As you go deeper in towards the centre laboratory you pass through progressively cleaner bio-medical zones , starting here with a shower . |
12 | Slowly they worked their way deeper in to the forest . |
13 | Yea o Yes er there was no clutch , only something you could erm it was sort of a forked iron er over the strap , and then you had a a long plank in in above the chaff cutter , that was the most dangerous thing . |
14 | we went up there with the dogs and let them in in to the burrow . |
15 | Because , although it 's before nine erm , the next morning erm you 're actually giving them now more lead time , you 've given them another day because an , sometime tomorrow you know , if it gets there at two o'clock and it 's off-loading in in in at the bay and someone checks that it 's been received and then someone makes a phone call to tell them it 's there , and then they 're doing something else , and then they come down and have a look at it , how many boxes do you think are sitting on loading bays that do n't get looked at for a day or two , or three , or four , five when they 've had a next day service ? |
16 | I I certainly did n't go in in in in with a rank on my shoulder , I went in as a recruit . |
17 | We had a little garden in the front and we used to put er a in in in the in in on the soil and we used to put some crumbs on on a on a plate you know . |
18 | And er and when that was been in the field whatever days , depending on the weather , if you 'd got a good dry summer well you 'd perhaps take it in in after a week , you see ? |
19 | was approved by the majority of the House of Lords in In re A Company [ 1981 ] A.C. 374 . |
20 | In this context Mr. Beloff relied on the decision of the House of Lords in In re An Inquiry under the Company Securities ( Insider Dealing ) Act 1985 [ 1988 ] A.C. 660 where the question arose whether a journalist had a reasonable excuse under section 178 of the Financial Services Act 1986 to refuse to answer questions put to him by inspectors , having regard to the terms of section 10 of the Contempt of Court Act 1981 which provides : |
21 | The tide was rising : it came filtering gently in through the salt-marsh vegetation , washing up the beach and receding , leaving ribbons of foam along the sand . |
22 | So go gently in to every week , every Sunday morning with me Simon and a Sunday breakfast show , seven till nine , join me you 'll enjoy it . |
23 | Kenya has about one million flamingos living around lakes Nakuru and Bogoria , a major tourist attraction , and the species ' survival is not said to be threatened by the epidemic , which is expected to die down in about a month . |
24 | We dropped down in to the trench and Tony produced a couple of tins of Compo rations . |
25 | Each mask unlocks lost memory when you look at it ; each mask gives access to a lost talent : it opens the door , if you like , and lets the legends out … or perhaps in across the threshold . |
26 | And Dannii 's not in at the moment so we 'll just have some music now . |
27 | ‘ Just in from the North and fresh as fish . ’ |
28 | SOME LATE news just in from the cutting edge of tabloid journalism . |
29 | And those countries already in on the act surged ahead — notably South Korea , which moved into the top ten richest countries in the world . |
30 | There was a brief impression of two men stumbling down the track as though they had been hit in the leg , while the man with the pinned arm , having broken the arrow that held him , hurtled off in to the undergrowth . |