Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] in [prep] [noun pl] " in BNC.
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1 | Ian Brown 's drop goal increased the lead to four points , but the last quarter belonged exclusively to the visitors with Stephen Cowan , Maurice Field , Richard Cullen , Colin Wilkinson and Graeme Copeland all getting in for tries from which full-back Colin Wilkinson converted two of them . |
2 | Senna then sliced past Berger to take third place and took second when the leading group all pulled in for pit-stops for new tyres between laps 29 and 34 . |
3 | I mean there was a big battle to get women into the Working Men 's Clubs , because they could only come in as men 's guests . |
4 | Before the introduction of the Kodak camera in 1888 , travel photography was usually only indulged in by professionals or serious amateurs . |
5 | Before the introduction of the Kodak camera in 1888 , travel photography was usually only indulged in by professionals or serious amateurs . |
6 | And as if on cue , reports have just come in of tracks and sightings of live rhinos in two Sumatran reserves — Way Kambas and Berbak Game Reserve in Jambi — where they were believed extinct . |
7 | Diana soon moved in to rooms at Buckingham Palace where she , her mother and a small team had to organize her wedding and her wardrobe . |
8 | But who is going to buy a scanner , starting price £100 , just to tune in to broadcasts they could hear more clearly on the radio ? |
9 | If you want her , you can fight for her and win her fair and square , and no more sneaking in at doors before honest men are out of their beds . |
10 | are far more fu , fun to watch because they always fly in from miles out |
11 | The hon. Gentleman always gives in to lobbies and should not have given in to that one . |
12 | EAST GERMANY 'S ruling politburo yesterday gave in to demands from independent opposition groups and said it was prepared to convene ‘ round table talks ’ about free elections and constitutional and electoral reform . |
13 | More recently we have learnt that the functioning of the immune system , that exquisitely coordinated mechanism protecting us from disease , is intimately tied in to levels of stress . |
14 | In her wake four English players also came in with scores on the right side of 80 . |
15 | But these findings are also tied in with assertions about social class differences in domesticity which abound in much of the literature dealing with women 's place in the family . |
16 | The number of arrests went up to 46 when the partners of those arrested were also taken in by police . |
17 | The slimmers themselves also chipped in with donations and in the end , Advances Manager Anne Miller was able to present a cheque for £338 to the hospice 's John Herd . |
18 | And she 's now moved in with relatives . |
19 | Do n't forget you can now ring in for offers , or to enter competitions in BBC Good Food . |
20 | Yes , but one I mean one of the things that I think is often smuggled in to discussions of class is value judgements erm along the lines of one class is better than another . |
21 | In recent years , it 's been nice to know that I could decide to take my wife Lizzie on Concorde and not have to ask permission from the bank manager , but I 've never really gone in for extravagances — they all add up to too many paper rounds . |
22 | We thought this might appeal to MKM readers , who often write in with requests and anyone interested should send four first class stamps towards expenses to the Guild Librarian for more details . |
23 | Furious staff claim they were even called in from holidays to be grilled by a specialist security firm at the MetroCentre in Gateshead , Tyne and Wear . |
24 | He said nothing of miraculous creation and instead proposed that the ‘ new ’ populations simply migrated in from areas not affected by the catastrophe . |
25 | A word of caution : we dare not simply burst in on others with a glibly phrased formula and expect them to be warm with forgiveness . |
26 | Rival Spanish star Jose Maria Olazabal twice chipped in for eagles , at the eighth and eleventh , to provide the excitement his Ryder Cup partner failed to produced . |
27 | They use them as stamps or cutters with dough and clay , but in conception they were intended for sorting and matching and thereby to link in with games and toys . |
28 | Sherrin recalled the actor occasionally phoning in with ideas for the monologues , but Crawford 's desire to deliver a eulogy to Sir Winston Churchill after the wartime Prime Minister 's funeral met with a cold response from his producer . |
29 | There is a lovely swimming pool and terrace cleverly landscaped in amongst trees . |
30 | Because it would , it would slide back in and it 's actually held in by muscles and ligaments , right |