Example sentences of "[verb] in to [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Two boys were remanded in to the care of the local authority by Leeds youth court last night .
2 We simply do not know how it fits in to the system of sociolinguistic variation and stratification in the city as a whole .
3 Moreover the fractal transform technique provides perceptual resolution independence : zoom in to a picture and instead of getting a blocky , pixellated image , the software gives a realistic effect by actually adding detail in that was n't in the original .
4 And some of these were found in Bristol harbour er and the pattern of the cloths was pressed in to the lead so we were able to put a microscope to that and see how it should be woven .
5 You paid a small fee you see or a small charge to have this and the your mother used to put the the dough in the tin and er a little s bit of paper with the name on it , you see with a name on it and that used to go in to the oven .
6 ‘ Does Faye … or Dr Greene … want me to go in to the hospital ? ’
7 You 've got ta get the stu the smell goes in to the liquid then you chuck the liquid away .
8 The er deputy goes in to the district and he he gives an insurance er by law that that the district is safe .
9 On Tuesday 17 September 1745 King James VIII was proclaimed at the Market Cross and his chosen regent , prince Charles , rode in to the city wearing Highland dress , crowned by a blue velvet bonnet and the now ubiquitous Jacobite badge , a white cockade .
10 SHe had eventually given in to a desire to seek Tammuz out , even though SHe already recognised the signs which meant he wanted to be left alone .
11 Celia kept slipping and Liza kept telling herself she was ridiculous to have given in to the child .
12 You want er you want a letter carried by hand and given in to the hand of Douglas MacArthur ?
13 For a moment she 'd been on the verge of telling Penny why she was in such a hurry , but the moment passed , and she was glad she had n't given in to the impulse .
14 Still , Huy had answered Surere 's summons , had even given in to the messenger 's insistence that they travel in the closed rickshaw , so that he would not be able to tell where they were going .
15 I too desired to be at home , and was glad when we were able to close our own dear front door behind us , and be gathered in to the silence of our little parlour .
16 The LIFESPAN Manager should log in to the LIFESPAN RDBI process directory ( i.e. where the 59 .
17 Again , you should log in to the VAX as the LIFESPAN Manager , and type :
18 Labour Members say that they want to have a debate , yet because they have been discomfited in other debates they have come in to the Chamber to start shouting and jeering .
19 More than 50 orphaned or injured otters from all over Britain have come in to the trust 's rehabilitation centre in south-west Scotland .
20 Many schools have education about drugs and solvents built in to the curriculum .
21 There is a clock on the cooker ; another on the video ; another on the dashboard of the car ; another built in to the pocket-calculator ; yet another on the end of the pen she uses ; another on the device that switches the boiler on and off ; yet another on the outside of the tall building Steven passes in his car on the flyover .
22 ‘ The policeman saw the car coming straight towards him , and thought he was going to be hit , and had to pull in to the side of the road .
23 Experience with rural advice in the north east area has shown that telephone advisers become skilled at solving basic problems over the phone and recognising those where the client needs to come in to a bureau for in-depth advice .
24 Bung in a card , plug in to the LAN , and your humble workaday PC has become a sexy , hi-tech LANstation .
25 Plug in to the mains ( you may need to plug in player and monitor separately ) ;
26 He felt like a moth that had been sucked in to a candle flame , but the fluttering was in his chest .
27 The water soaks into the ground and becomes sucked in to a sandstone strata , which holds it like a sponge under the city .
28 Oliver was gently carried in to a bed , and received more care and kindness than he had ever had in his life .
29 She 'd booked in to a hotel on the Place Gambetta , had a leisurely bath to iron out the kinks of the journey , then followed the receptionist 's directions to the old part of the town , a maze of narrow streets where old timbered buildings leaned amiably towards each other .
30 We gazed enraptured at the city of Bath from the train as it drew in to the station — it was all laid out on the slopes of Lansdown like an aerial map of a moon landscape .
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