Example sentences of "[noun sg] [vb -s] in [prep] [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 This winsome description fits in with the descriptions of the messianic age in the book of Isaiah , with the wolf lying down with the lamb , the lion and the ox eating straw together , and the little child playing happily and fearlessly with them and even putting its little hand unhurt into the hole of the poisonous viper .
2 You 've got ta get the stu the smell goes in to the liquid then you chuck the liquid away .
3 GM schools will be able to change their character if that is what parents clearly want and the change fits in with the wider needs of the local area .
4 But more important is a feeling that the sky burial fits in with the isolation and strangeness of the setting .
5 They are a lovey-dovey couple , much given , for reasons that remain obscure , to roguishly gagging each other with bits of masking tape , but tension sets in with the arrival of Clara 's best friend Lillibet from America .
6 It 's a fair cop : female fan gives in to the shamanic rhythms in Houston
7 of course , if the vacancy requirements fluctuate as well , as is the case with contractors , a kind of see-saw effect sets in with the recruitment team oscillating between periods of intense activity and chaos on the one hand , and having nothing to do on the other hand .
8 Won agreements to end the dumping of chemical sludges in to the North Sea .
9 The light comes in from the sun , heat .
10 And the star of the show … the Russian Bear comes in from the cold .
11 ( c ) The knee drops slightly as the foot digs in to the opponent 's midsection
12 The grinning face of the fairground boy leers in through the wire .
13 The primarily agricultural work blends in with the liturgical calendar of the church .
14 The branch road from Dent joins in at a bridge and the hamlet of Cowgill , once a parish in its own right , is immediately beyond : here is a church built in 1873 , a converted school , the pleasant residence and gardens of Cowgill Grange and an isolated terrace of cottages .
15 When they are in moult they often sit ashore on the rocks , when their dark brown plumage blends in with the dark rocks .
16 City : New Chancellor floats in with the pound
17 If a burglar breaks in through a window , he will want to open the door so that he can carry the television out to his vehicle .
18 This exercise ties in with the " Retaining The Angle " exercises and also helps to develop the left Latissimus Dorsi , Trapezius and Triceps muscles , which are responsible for starting the downswing .
19 A fox on the run , seconds before the leading hound moves in for the kill .
20 It 's 10 minutes today : less than a cat puts in on a bird .
21 As the snake closes in for the kill , its mouth sensors guide it with deadly accuracy .
22 In addition to filling the significant gap which has arisen because this group falls in between the usual area specializations ( Turkish/Anatolian and Caucasian ) the project will also contribute to several fields of current debate within economic anthropology and ethnic studies .
23 In his story , a scruffy Neapolitan improvisatore breaks in on a Petersburg gentleman-poet in his study .
24 The er deputy goes in to the district and he he gives an insurance er by law that that the district is safe .
25 As the attacker 's front kick sails in towards the target , the defender , by launching an attack of his own , puts his body out of line of the oncoming kick .
26 The organisers say kite-flying is a green sport and the event ties in with a workshop course run for local schoolchildren on the arts and the environment .
27 Metazoans are virtually absent except in some of the lakes where fresh water seeps in at the edges .
28 and he 's just sort of pottering around , wind you know , things winding down , and suddenly the gardener rushes in from the garden , starts trying to kill him , and he shoots , and he
29 Then the head falls in like a pumpkin .
30 One August evening I was fishing the Tweed at Manor , downstream from where Manor Water bustles in from the south to meet the ‘ Queen ’ of Scottish rivers .
  Next page