Example sentences of "[noun] [verb] in to [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 He seemed to cause embarrassment to his side of the room , but a sense of doors opening and light coming in to mine ( p. 41 ) .
2 Whatever the pleasure at ‘ new experiments ’ , the party in effect gave in to nationalism and the social forces it represented .
3 Day 2 I travelled to Kasuma calling in to tabora on the way , ( about 4 3/4 hours . )
4 Many retailing organizations said they gave fixed-term contracts to seasonal workers brought in to cope with the Christmas peak .
5 They then returned to the Print Room , while guests went in to luncheon in the Great Hall .
6 John Sinclair , who runs Cliveden so successfully as a luxury hotel , and his attractive wife , guests went in to dinner in the dining-rooms .
7 Against the protests of many of their salesmen , then , the Central Authority and Area Boards gave in to government pressure to restrict promotional advertising and hire purchase schemes in order to curtail the over-rapid growth of demand .
8 When Georg came in to lunch , covered in cow muck and mud , the converging smells caused Frau Trauffer to wave her hand in the air and give a disgusted ‘ Phaw ! ’
9 Hours later UN forces received 72 Red Eye anti-aircraft missiles , the most important weaponry handed in to date .
10 Erm it says er before Jesus ascended in to heaven , He gave a final command which was ?
11 If that decision is the right one , then the spirit can progress to the next lesson ; if the person gives in to temptation , then the spirit has to be faced with that choice again and again ( either later in that same life or perhaps in a future one ) until the right decision is reached .
12 ‘ I do n't really agree with it , ’ said Armstrong whose wallet would certainly not be getting as heavy as other coaches brought in to knock teams into shape .
13 One day , Jimmy Coutts cycled in to work ( he ‘ lived out ’ with his wife and young family in a village near Cambridge ) , and said that he had seen a telegraph boy delivering a telegram at a house opposite his , where he knew the wife of one of the air crew officers at Oakington lived .
14 But it does carry a corollary which is fundamental : namely , that for democracy to give in to terrorism is to undermine its own deepest foundation .
15 She resisted all temptations to give in to homesickness : she had been given the choice between staying at home and starting a new life , and having chosen the latter she was determined to enjoy every waking minute to the full .
16 We can usually reckon on a degree of peace and quiet once the passengers go in to dinner . ’
17 Archer books in to history with new mega-deal
18 Boyle cleverly kept the ball in play on the right-hand touch , Rory Underwood came in to midfield from his wing and sharp accurate passing allowed Leicester to exploit an overlap on the left .
19 Well this is where , I mean this is like this comes into omega squared will came in to electronics .
20 It is therefore folly to give in to behaviour of this kind , and you should try to prevent it by being aware of the situation when it may arise and not responding as the dog demands .
21 Updated refresher training sessions were held for plant operators and new reporting procedures brought in to cover routine monitoring .
22 Bill Drummond , the man brought in to sort out Coats 's clothing side two years ago , has been sent out to restore Brazil to profits in 1993 .
23 ‘ It 's an amazing opportunity to break in to theatre , but we 've had virtually no response from Jobcentres , ’ a spokeswoman says .
24 Germany put in to practice its social ideology and policy in a much more vigorous way than Italy did .
25 Tanks and riot police drafted in to lorry row
26 With a quarter of the audience tuned in to Radio Hamburg , the reputation of the British press and broadcasting for fairness and accuracy was bound to seem less than established .
27 And a shelduck flew in to splash-land .
28 NMFS caved in to pressure from the tuna industry , and claimed that it was possible to place observers aboard only 50 per cent of tuna seiners for the season beginning 1 January 1989 .
29 Then it was time to go in to dinner .
30 As some of the old Orkney words and expressions fall in to disuse , links in the valuable heritage that thurls us to our Viking ancestry are broken .
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