Example sentences of "[noun pl] [conj] [noun] [verb] in " in BNC.
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1 | Women have been randomly raped by individuals , gang-raped by uniformed men , and raped in detention centres either by the guards or people let in by the guards . |
2 | In the follow-up work , which continued for several weeks , the class worked on the design of castles inventing all manner of ingenious devices to prevent unwanted intruders or attackers getting in , went on a site visit to a castle , produced drawings and models and carried out a great deal of oral work , all inspired by the original story . |
3 | One point , just to add to what Liz is saying , and I support everything she 's said , one further point is that accuracy is terribly important because if you actually have a mistake in the press release , and the editors publish it or it 's broadcast and a whole lot of listeners or readers write in and complain , they 'll find it very hard to forgive you because they get themselves in a terrible problem , so do be sure you 're giving them accurate information all the time . |
4 | Fees take months or years to come in , and quite a proportion are never recovered . |
5 | Assorted addicts and alcoholics drifted in and out of the place . |
6 | There were small studios for authors and composers to work in . |
7 | Why do many buses , cars and trains go in and out of Treforest each weekday ? |
8 | The mechanisms of international relations from the age of Richelieu to that of Robespierre thus show a mixture of the old and the new , of old methods and assumptions working in and gradually being adapted to , new situations . |
9 | As some of the old Orkney words and expressions fall in to disuse , links in the valuable heritage that thurls us to our Viking ancestry are broken . |
10 | Resources for learning also include the local area , the environment , the countryside and the townscape , museums and historic buildings and their collections , the extensive range of local material offered by local record offices , or the local study centre , or reference library , as well as pictures and artefacts brought in from home , reminiscences of family members or the elderly , interesting visitors to the school and many other things ( see Box 13 ) . |
11 | Well , we know the tomato splats have already gone mouldy on Comic Relief , but we had so many pictures and stories sent in we just had to squeeze out another page . |
12 | But doubts and anxieties crept in among my thoughts , riding the cruel thumping of the headache . |
13 | He knows how fingers burn like twigs and head fall in like pumpkins . |
14 | The sale of cookery books and glass-cloths brought in more money , the cookery books producing £746 . |
15 | Carlo and McGowan waited on the steps while Creed went in . |
16 | His best chance came in the 10th minute when Woan 's slightly over-hit cross allowed Southall to save with his legs as Keane closed in . |
17 | ‘ I opened my eyes as Peter walked in , ’ says Avril . |
18 | The management of corporate culture is expensive of time to do it — the endless meetings that people participate in . |
19 | Writing for period instruments ( players from the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment ) was a further excuse to stick to the keys that Mozart wrote in , and fully enjoy playing with some of the most wonderful musical ideas anyone has ever had . ’ |
20 | What might have been first visualised as a basic low cost word processor might have transformed into a full blown all bells and whistles application that has spreadsheets and databases built in , yet , if you 're still using the first release , you could be losing out . |
21 | Electro-bass driven rhythms flex sinewy muscles while all manner of noises and squiggles float in and out of the mix , never drawn-out enough to become boring but well-defined enough to make their presence felt . |
22 | By the time Adidas and Umbro got in on the act in the late-Seventies , a shirt could be carrying up to 40 little advertisements for the manufacturers , less than subtly integrated into the stripes . |
23 | it up from it with all sorts of weird accents and things put in , |
24 | Step-family life is multi-dimensional and multi-faceted , making it a complex arena for parents and children to live in , or practitioners to work in . |
25 | Four rounds after people fall in , the metal plates close again . |
26 | The basic recipe is a reduction of white wine and brown fond de veau lié with a julienne of gherkins and mustard stirred in at the last moment . |
27 | B : ‘ For about nine months we have had a succession of builders , surveyors and decorators trooping in and out . |
28 | It has all of the facilities you need , and a few nice bells and whistles thrown in . |
29 | In Kenya and Tanzania Asian dailies and weeklies existed in both English and Gujerati . |
30 | As the Dwarfs marched forwards Orcs and Goblins closed in from their hiding places in the slopes to left and right . |