Example sentences of "[verb] in [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | A former bus driver is staging an all night sit in outside the offices of a training organisation he claims forced him out of a job . |
2 | In what other job might you call in and use a hot air balloon to appear over a city on a publicity stunt and that same afternoon sit in on a seminar which you have arranged as a scientific event ? |
3 | And significantly , her boss and colleague sit in on the trial , revealing their emotional investment in what 's at stake . |
4 | sit in on the public |
5 | Erm it was actually somebody who came for an interview and you know how you sit in on the presentations when you do the group presentations ? |
6 | By late afternoon we 'd stopped in at a number of bars along the pier . |
7 | Two boys were remanded in to the care of the local authority by Leeds youth court last night . |
8 | Is n't the phrase just meaningless , flung in for the rhythm , meaning no more than ‘ by pillar or by post ’ , ‘ by night or by day ’ , ‘ by hook or by crook ’ ? |
9 | Black rain clouds were scudding in over the Thames . |
10 | I said , ‘ I am older than you , sir ( how easily that polite ‘ sir ’ crept in as a mode of address ! ) — old enough to discover that finding out often leads to less pleasurable states of mind than mere ignorance ! ’ |
11 | Tick crept in through the window of the dining-room and surprised Lady Laetitia Winthrop playing at her virginals ( a likely story ) . |
12 | And then , as the pale light of morning crept in through the window , she was awoken by the feel of his mouth on her breasts . |
13 | As he crept in through the scullery window she would leap from her bedroom and conceal herself in the nettles , unconscious of the pain . |
14 | It was the home side who took the lead in the twenty sixth minute when Doug Taylor beat Brian House on the right wing , put in a low cross and Pedro Herbert crept in behind the defence to score . |
15 | He came back , and he had been very quick , with an umbrella from which , as he plunged in through the swing door , he was tearing the plastic wrapping . |
16 | The bridge has fallen in with the Mayor and Corporation on it . |
17 | ‘ We pulled out all the stops to produce extra stock needed to meet the charter flights , so the paint could be flown in over the weekends . ’ |
18 | As thousands of refugees prepare for winter , our reporter Kim Barnes has flown in with a plane-load of desperately-needed warm clothing , to see at first hand the work being done to help . |
19 | The star of the festival is Hans Rey … a stunt rider who can do anything and everything with a mountain bike … he 's been flown in for the classic … |
20 | The star of the festival is Hans Rey … a stunt rider who can do anything and everything with a mountain bike … he 's been flown in for the classic … |
21 | Lee remembered when a sparrow had flown in through the window of her bedroom when she was a child . |
22 | National Guardsmen and military police flown in from the USA to help stem looting in the immediate aftermath of the hurricane were withdrawn gradually towards the end of the year . |
23 | 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 . |
24 | The competitors were in various categories for judging and were to be judged by professionals specially flown in from the States . |
25 | When his mind 's on fisticuffs he sits in on the training sessions there . |
26 | yeah , but that in which case I think you should try and tie the story in with it became in like the canteen |
27 | We simply do not know how it fits in to the system of sociolinguistic variation and stratification in the city as a whole . |
28 | An administrative culture — which is concerned with rules , roles , authority and fits in with the concept of a role culture . |
29 | The Open University offers you a lifelong opportunity to continue your education — to whatever level you want , and in a way that fits in with the rest of your life . |
30 | However we feel that it is important that each type of service debates the issues fully , in order to reach a realistic agreed policy , which also fits in with the policies of other local services . |