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

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1 of perhaps my characteristics cos I tend to go in to work at eight o'clock just before I write any more in and I do have to clear everything before I even start the day .
2 The f the thing is if he needs to go in for treatment , he 's only going to get worse if he does n't get it .
3 On annual leave the rest right this wants to go in for quarter of an hour does n't it ?
4 Since England do not use a sweeper he has to come in at right-back , a position which tends to emphasise his limitations going forward .
5 Yet when a chance came to her — a few extra lines , a small but important part — she would forget to learn the lines , forget to come in on cue and for a while would not be asked again .
6 He wants to ride in on pop so we ca n't ignore him .
7 Angrily she dashed the tears away with the back of one hand , refusing to give in to weakness and self-pity .
8 VERIFONE AND SAUNDERS JEFFRIES SEEK TO CASH IN ON NATION OF SHOPKEEPERS
9 Kick-offs have even been delayed to fit in with Sky TV advertisements .
10 What I mean by that is , when you get back to your branches , you will go onto further training programmes in branch training , developing your practice training , so each branch will vary how they sort of co-ordinate this , but let's say , we 've been in a few months now , and twice a week we 've got to go in for training .
11 Well came from Bar which is er a matter of six miles , six to eight miles out side Girran and you 'd got to come in by foot or by trap .
12 It 's a fact of life that if you 're in any way well known , then you 're going to come in for criticism .
13 They are pictured with the regional field salesmen who just happened to come in on photo day !
14 Anderson , bronzed from a holiday in Florida earlier in the summer , says : ‘ My old sparring partner Daniel O'Donnell has promised to drop in at Christmas .
15 So , chopped frets meet slapdash rhythms and get on famously , wisely deciding to move in with singer Chris Waterman 's big , gold-white guitar and 24-going-on-14 cherubic looks .
16 Thousands set to flock in for country festival
17 Hundreds of funeral guests were beginning to filter in on foot from the outlying corners of the kingdom , bringing sacrificial fighting cocks , pigs and magnificently decked-out water-buffalo .
18 Answer : ‘ At least a dustbin 's got rubbish in it ’ ) , teachers try to ‘ encourage ’ you ( ‘ You 'll just have to stay in at break time to do it all again . ’ )
19 With a crack regiment drawn from the other end of his line , de Bazelaire decided to throw in at dawn on the 8th one of those swift counter-attacks .
20 The division of the YJ Lovell group says the move leaves it better placed to cash in on work it is currently bringing in from South Yorkshire .
21 A creditor does not generally expect P Notes to flood in by mail .
22 When he failed to get in to Merchant Taylors , Iain was sent off to boarding school in Bishop 's Stortford .
23 That is also good news for John Collins , who was forced to fill in at left-back during Galloway 's injury and Mowbray 's suspension .
24 Poor to get extra help with VAT costs Major forced to step in over fuel bill row
25 Meanwhile , James continues to tune in to Radio 1 .
26 This is worrying firms hoping to cash in on cable-TV .
27 ‘ He idolised the professional wrestlers he saw on television , and was determined to get in on action . ’
28 She always had to stay in at lunchtime .
29 Oh I was playing up and they chucked me out the class or something and I had to stay in at dinner time .
30 Banbridge are the only one of the ten Senior One teams who wo n't be playing home games on such surfaces , and now that Ballynahinch and Portadown have elected to slot in at Valley Leisure Centre and Newry respectively , half of the Senior Two games will be played on synthetic too .
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