Example sentences of "[verb] in with [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | The bridge has fallen in with the Mayor and Corporation on it . |
2 | 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 . |
3 | An administrative culture — which is concerned with rules , roles , authority and fits in with the concept of a role culture . |
4 | 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 . |
5 | The way in which this subject fits in with the course in Typography & Graphic Communication as a whole is briefly described . |
6 | He 's gone part of the way along the r road by doing what you 've just been describing non-executive directors but erm it could be a weakness if he 's seen as a er erm a business man and cavalier as opposed to somebody who fits in with the style that the city 's always looking for . |
7 | It is also experimenting with a hybrid telemarketing scheme called WinCentralDirect that fits in with the company 's plug-and-play attempt and puts customers in contact with NT-certified technical and business consultants . |
8 | It is also experimenting with a hybrid telemarketing scheme called WinCentralDirect that fits in with the company 's plug-and-play attempt and puts customers in contact with NT-certified technical and business consultants . |
9 | The growth of quangos fits in with the idea that the burden on ministers could be eased if government departments concentrated on the development of policy and ‘ hived off ’ large blocs of routine administration . |
10 | However , the observation that the delivery time of a particular item from the Annexe depends very largely on how well the request for it fits in with the schedule of the van running between the Library and the Annexe , suggests that it might be helpful to readers if the van 's times of operation and the main pressmarks of outhoused material were advertised . |
11 | Because it fits in with the way you see yourself ? |
12 | The system is flexible and fits in with the user 's way of working . |
13 | In ‘ Great Expectations ’ all the character speak differently and the way that Dickens portrays them to speak all fits in with the character . |
14 | In the next chapters we will go on to consider what homoeopathy is , how it arose and developed , and how it fits in with the scheme of health and disease outlined here . |
15 | From this analysis you get a precise idea of the level of difficulty of a text , you can compare one text with another text , and you can see whether it fits in with the syllabus your students are working to . |
16 | CIBD 's team of Relationship Managers had a chance to hear for themselves how their role fits in with the future for the Royal Bank when they were addressed by Chief Executive George Mathewson in February . |
17 | But more important is a feeling that the sky burial fits in with the isolation and strangeness of the setting . |
18 | The ideology of psychologism also fits in with the need for motivating people for productive work , and at the same time makes possible and legitimates a fascination with mystery and magic . |
19 | Darwin 's own account of the unrestrained ‘ law of battle ’ in animals readily fits in with the theory of natural selection ; therefore , as his account of the law of battle is now thought to be wrong , we are left with the problem of reconciling new observation and established theory . |
20 | You need to structure it in a way that fits in with the argument that you 're go the line of argument you 're going to be putting before the magistrate . |
21 | This is a ‘ partial subjectivity : that which fits in with the subject-of-science of the positivist ideology of science ; also , it is a subjectivity which is consistent with the rationalising subject of capitalist economic exchange ’ ( Henriques et al . |
22 | I just wanted the fight to stop before you began wading in with the rucksack . ’ |
23 | That 's basically when I got in with a guy in Memphis and we started Fernwood Records , and I got interested in the engineering side of it . |
24 | Erm which I saw again in Marks this year which you could wear tucked in with a belt . |
25 | Do n't rush in with the word before he/she has had time to think , but do n't leave him/her struggling . |
26 | With this , the petrified toddler would disappear in the rushing water and , floundering like an asthmatic salmon , be tossed like a cork all the way down , occasionally smashing its as-yet-unhardened cranium into the wall and ending up bobbing dazed in the pool at the bottom , while other members of the family zoomed in with the Camcorder , dreaming of the £1,000 they 'd win from Jeremy Beadle . |
27 | Once beyond possible resurrection , they melded in with the background and slowly rotted away , enriching the world . |
28 | Crewe finished the first half the stronger and were possibly unlucky not to go in with a lead , the Leeds defense was looking fragile ( Fairclough was back at central def. — agghhhh ) , the midfield ( esp . |
29 | It was better to stand out at the beginning than to go in with the expectation that he would soon have to provoke a further crisis by resignation . |
30 | He wanted to go in with the sun behind him . |