Example sentences of "[noun pl] in [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | To create icon movies , you can pull icons in from the clip-art library , capture them off the desktop with the built-in capture program or create your own with the Frame Editor . |
2 | It 's enabled us all to work and to conduct our cases in as an amiable atmosphere as the adversarial system allows , and we are grateful for that . |
3 | They were amused by the way she consumed endless bowls of ice-cream or asked them to make her special snacks in between the normal meals . |
4 | England 's far-sighted youth development policy is now being matched by the selectors ' willingness to throw teenagers in at the deep end . |
5 | Deleting ‘ For them this brochure is unnecessary ’ ties in with the second interpretation . |
6 | At Lyness , the Thorsvoe noses in on the low tide . |
7 | And a there was a domestic one in each group there was one along near the baths in among the thirteen , and there was another white one near Old Gate Bridge . |
8 | This sometimes happens when managers must prepare for press conferences and they develop a superb presentation only to drop through the floor when an awkward press vulture homes in on the one weak link in the chain of argument . |
9 | THE angle between Saturn and Pluto on March 20 and October 9 homes in on the financial sector of your chart . |
10 | An unpaid tax bill instilled fears into the companies who dealt with Red Rhino and everyone slapped their bills in at the same time . |
11 | As I see it , you get your bills in for a certain amount and you 've got to pay it . |
12 | Deane was playing well out of position acting as a left wing , to such an extent that he got a few crosses in during the first half . |
13 | He was expected to get the crosses in from the left and get back to cover the left of defence . |
14 | You could use both an ink and a paper that tones in with the pressed flowers , such as some lovely parchment and a sepia-coloured ink , with some pressed flowers in shades that are rich but evocative of days gone by . |
15 | I plugged my naked feet in between the empty seats as tears rolled down my cheeks . |
16 | If Baldwin met Parliament , Lloyd George might keep the Conservatives in for a few weeks to humiliate them . |
17 | and there 's not any reason why once your in you canne put another couple of lines in , and you can even put a couple of lines in on a different number if you want |
18 | Ravi Shankar 's score , drawing elements in from a wide range of sources , is both seductively lyrical and at times rhythmically complex . |
19 | Any idea what you do to make all of these other intervals in to a minor interval apart from those two ? |
20 | Did you live an in any other countries in between the two years ? |
21 | He went further and tied the distances between the sites in with the known distances between planets in the solar system . |
22 | Maxim had run into that before , on exercises , when he wanted to dig his troops in among the growing vegetables , and probably Hitler 's soldiers had been no more welcome . |
23 | They were flying the Liberators in for the big daylight raids on the Ruhr and one of them flew straight into the field where Grandad was working , planting carrots for the war effort . |
24 | Then , to rub things in for the assembled paparazzi , Kylie made the photographers sign legal forms as they entered the theatre . |
25 | That , that is , that is the way that they were chosen , and two years ago , I think , we put one point two million pounds in for the first seven schemes . |
26 | What if the man had for years been an opera singer in England — it was a chillul hashem , a profanation of the Divine Name , to mix operatic arias in with the traditional sacred melodies . |
27 | Even though there is n't much space for plot or characters in between the authorial wisecracks , at 435 ill-written pages Gridlock is about four times as long as it needs to be . |
28 | What sort of problems provoked the integration of various cultural symbols in to a new package of employment practices ? |
29 | And that very excess of safety inspired some bright Vadinamians in to a galaxy-class piece of lateral thinking . |
30 | ‘ A number of local residents commented that there was already a disproportionate ratio of pigs to people in the locality and although proposals to extend the operation would have led to some improvement , in that a new farrowing house would have been built to bring the pigs in from the old farm buildings , in fact the larger pig population would increase the scope for offensive odours to permeate the village . ’ |