Example sentences of "[noun] [vb pp] in [prep] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | Nineteen Cubans and Spaniards were allowed to disembark , plus three passengers with authentic visas ; the remaining 900 or so Jews waited for news of the negotiations which involved , variously , the Cuban President , his director of immigration , the shipping line , the local relief committee , the ship 's captain and a lawyer flown in from the New York headquarters of the Joint Distribution Committee . |
2 | The City expects the Chancellor to alter but not altogether abandon the rule , effectively reducing the amount of gilt-edged stock bought in by the Bank of England . |
3 | These , including tea brought in by the East India Company from China , grew from around £500,000 in value in 1700 to almost £2 million by 1770 . |
4 | The entire loft is a matted tangle of sticks and twigs brought in by the jackdaws over God knows how many centuries ; in parts it is many metres deep . |
5 | Back in the good old days , you could manage your practice with nothing more complicated or technologically advanced than a pen , paper and adding machine , with a manual typewriter thrown in for the real forward thinkers . |
6 | So there is a check built in to the , to the council procedures . |
7 | Superimposed on this map of things as they were , one sometimes finds the lines drawn in by the commissioners showing where they propose to create the new fields and hedges , and the new roads , public and private . |
8 | But to be faced with the short-term threat of redundancy at the hands of private contractors brought in by the health authority would mean that they might feel subject to a considerable degree of provocation . |
9 | Trim back fuchsias brought in from the garden and pot them up in a peat and sand mixture . |
10 | Cnicht 's south-west ridge provides a rapid direct ascent to the summit , with some pleasant scrambling thrown in near the top , and as height is gained the views across Snowdonia gradually unfold . |
11 | In this case we were lucky and the route had been re-equipped with new bolts placed in between the old bolts . |
12 | But fortunately at that moment her gynaecologist called in for a brief visit and Brian went off to the nursery . |
13 | He enjoyed not being known as Inspector Rose , he enjoyed the sausages from Spratling 's Colonial Butchers , he enjoyed kedgeree , and most of all he enjoyed the fresh fish brought in by the landlady 's schoolboy son . |
14 | However , it became established at Woodford and through Warner 's generosity offshoots were distributed , as were many other rarities raised by him from seeds brought in from the Far East . |
15 | like Jimmy next door , he 's always dropping off and he got a vent put in at the bottom of his door , they took the pipe out and behind you had a big open |
16 | The plantation itself is close to a feeder stream that runs straight into the Cothi , as would acid taken in by the conifers . |
17 | I wanted the sleeves to be semi-full , with the ease taken in at the wrist . |
18 | Its latent function was to ensure that the lower classes fitted in with the designs of their betters . |
19 | This is more cash paid in from the last three weeks actually . |
20 | Nerina called in at the office to see her mother . |
21 | It all started early this morning , when a rather anxious mum called in at the office . |
22 | The situation as we saw it was that there were no obvious leading firms er there were firms that had a particularly they were leaders in a particular niche markets for example 's being very aggressive , they were certainly nationally leading on insolvency and they were getting a lot of a lot of beneficial er publicity from that , locally we saw them er as erm th they were very good in the tax field and certainly in the consultancy field , having one of their major consultancy based in by the airport . |
23 | As John has already said , when s er Microsoft first introduced Access and therefore the O D B C software , the only database which had the driver bundled in with the the box was SQL Server . |
24 | Other sounds caught in between the meaningless words . |
25 | But Vinnie 's man with his head staved in on a patch of waste ground near Deptford Station does not get mentioned . |
26 | Although the retailer may make no profit on that particular item , general sales will be increased as customers drawn in by the loss leader will then buy other goods . |
27 | During a debate on the dispute at the Labour Party Conference in Brighton yesterday , Steve Gazzard , an ambulance worker , said that by allowing arbitration , ministers would then ‘ repay their debt ’ to ambulancemen called in after the bombing during the Tory party conference which was held in the town in 1984 . |
28 | The consultants called in by the Home Office identify computers and information technology generally as the best way of saving time . |
29 | This hit carpets and furniture retailing particularly hard , as did new furniture fire regulations brought in by the European Commission piecemeal . |
30 | Enemy searchlights probed in from the sea , going out before a renewed burst of shelling and heavy machine-gun fire added to civilian casualties in the town . |