Example sentences of "[verb] in at [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Instead we leave the pictures to be stripped in at the printers , and get a better image as a result .
2 You got a very good committee , dedicated committee erm who , you see the young trainees were sent to the technical colleges and you see , erm some of them did go on if they graduated to Stanford Hall , but I mean those that went to technical college , we used to have to get the committee to sit in at the examinations .
3 Insects that fly in at the sides encounter a vertical baffle of netting that divides the trap along its axis , and tend to fly or clamber to the highest point of the baffle where the only way out is into a collecting jar .
4 If anything had been brought in for you it had to be handed in at the screws ' table , and they had to sign the property book .
5 Here we see the usual linen winding-sheet , parted to show not only the face but the entire body , with the arms placed at his side and turned in at the elbows so that the hands meet over the groin .
6 From the basic shape it can be deduced that the arms were placed alongside the body , turned in at the elbows , with the hands on the groin .
7 ‘ I am happy to have afforded you amusement , ma'am , ’ he said ironically , and turned in at the gates of the Lodge .
8 He made his way round the side of the house , peering in at the windows , noting that some dishes , though washed , had been left on the draining board .
9 Metazoans are virtually absent except in some of the lakes where fresh water seeps in at the edges .
10 But more complex emotions creep in at the fringes of the tale , where the grandfather 's ostracism of the man his daughter loves leads to several fraught emotional scenes .
11 The doves flew in at the mouths and made their nests inside .
12 I had to have a talk with Mrs Rumney and a few days later I called in at The Laurels .
13 When he called in at the offices of Grubworthy and Sting , on his way through London , they were no less honest with him .
14 Theda came to herself to find that she lay in a large four-poster bed , with the curtains drawn back , and the weak autumn sun coming in at the windows .
15 There were times when I was starting in at the cattle that it stood between me and the road .
16 The arms positioned alongside the body turn in at the elbows with the hands over the groin .
17 We huddled in its dark ruinous rooms sipping bitter tea while gusts of sand blew in at the doorways .
18 ‘ It 'll have to be taken in at the seams . ’
19 ‘ Charlie , yer best call in at the police station on yer way to work tomorrer mornin' . ’
20 It would probably be better to drop in at The Times ' party , see who he could find to have dinner with and take pot luck in a town not noted for its restaurants .
21 Heinrich burst in at the doors , carrying two bottles , followed by Emily , somewhat flushed , holding a bunch of herbs .
22 When lounging around I find these tend to dig in at the hips .
23 The sun was streaming in at the windows of her room .
24 It comes in at the nerve-ends and is translated into chemical and electrical reactions .
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