Example sentences of "[noun] in from the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It 's expenditure out and then income in from the Government .
2 It 'd be crazy to sort of do a dive in from the sort of recuperative process .
3 Millie is setting up two music stands and lugging her cello case in from the hall .
4 In addition , the Secretary of State has recently made an announcement on the decision to bring the high-speed link in from the east via Stratford rather than from the south .
5 The other team was the Levitt team with No 1 Libor Krejci , No 2 Prince Abdullah , who had flown his ponies in from the Argentine , and played extremely well , scoring several of the goals ; No 3 Marcelo Caset from the Argentine , and Lord Charles Beresford at back .
6 Jack had to fill the coal scuttles , Kevin to bring in the logs , Aengus had to roll yesterday 's papers into sausage-like shapes which would be used for lighting the fires later , Gerry , who was meant to be the animal lover , had to take Oswald for a run in the park , and see that there was something on the bird table in the garden , and Ronan had to open the big heavy curtains in the front rooms , take the milk in from the steps and place it in the big fridge and brush whatever had to be brushed from the big granite steps leading up to the house .
7 ‘ Yeah , and they 'll get a chef in from the Savoy an ’ all , I suppose . ’
8 Western leaders were content to rest on their laurels , convinced that Nato 's ‘ steadfastness ’ had been crucial in bringing the Communist bloc in from the cold , that Western prosperity had been enough to convince the East of the hollowness of Marxism .
9 Your work is n't lost ; you just have to merge your styles in from the document in which you created them .
10 He is to bring the men under his command in from the west .
11 Amateur Steve Swiers brought David Elsworth in from the cold on Statajack , also at Epsom .
12 The highlight of the whole tournament — almost irrespective of their performance on the field — will be SOUTH AFRICA 's emergence from the woods , a coming in from the cold which is generating a great excitement .
13 Somewhere on the outside was a frieze of armed horsemen ; and over the doorway in from the porch was a stone beam with animals in low relief on its outer face and , seated above it , two statues of goddesses ( or a goddess ) facing each other .
14 Then Morton helped to carry the equipment in from the growler .
15 And then Emily fetched the cream cakes in from the fridge .
16 But the SPD could now find little alternative to Kohl 's policy of welcoming the SED 's demise , allowing refugees in from the East and exploring possible routes to German reunification .
17 Watching him now , as he shepherded parents in from the garden for the start of the pageant , listening to his deep , authoritative voice , he seemed , to Robert , more English than he himself could ever be .
18 By January 1991 , the tunnellers were about ¾km in from the shaft , somewhere beneath Clifton College .
19 Machine stitch 3cm in from the corner at each end .
20 A New Brutalist Conservative government has brought the moral Right in from the cold of post-60s permissive liberalism and has given it its head .
21 If only it were n't so cluttered up with oil installations , it would be so lovely , for the glimpses of countryside through the pipelines hint at the kind of rural charm which is a real balm to salt-stained mariners in from the sea .
22 ‘ We will still be whipping the ball in from the wings as we have always done and we will continue with the style which brought us two trophies last season . ’
23 Waiting in the cockpit , he watched a couple of tanned young Americans race each other in from the reef on sailboards .
24 However , a little later he says ‘ set the tenon gauge the same distance in from the reference plane . ’
25 ‘ Laverne , do ya wan na bring your bicycle in from the rain , or do ya wann it to rust to the spot like everything else round here ? ’
26 One consequence is the appearance of sugar-transporting molecules which bring sugar in from the surroundings .
27 But I carry a cauliflower in from the plot
28 Fusion in from the cold
29 The two men stood side by side a few yards in from the edge of the treeline , examining the layout of the ground between them and the house .
30 No boiling kettles and lugging the bath in from the yard .
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