Example sentences of "[noun sg] [prep] [noun] [verb] in " in BNC.
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1 | I beg to move , That leave be given to bring in a Bill to provide for certain descriptions of shops in England and Wales to be open for trade on Sunday , subject to their being registered with the local authority ; to impose a general prohibition on the opening on Sunday of other shops , extending this prohibition to certain business premises which on week-days are open for the service of customers ; to provide protection for persons employed in or for the purposes of a shop which is , or is to be , registered for Sunday opening , where they have conscientious or other objections to working on Sunday ; to make consequential and other repeals in the Shops Act 1950 ; and for connected purposes . |
2 | Most teacher-training programmes include provision for trainees to sit in with other teachers so that they get some experience of the environment they will work in . |
3 | The response of governments to such problems has been to redefine the relationship between control and autonomy by providing a more formal framework for enterprises to operate in . |
4 | Should there be any sand or gravel on the bottom of the pond for plants to root in ? |
5 | Gav — I notice there was no gossip about Batts nipping in to the bank for a few sov 's . |
6 | The left hand side is known as the debit ( entry for value coming in ) and the right hand side the credit ( entry for value going out ) . |
7 | The bar was a regular haunt for men going in to begin their night shift , and the two were on the same shunting team . |
8 | Not all spreadsheets have a great deal of calculation built in to them . |
9 | As a result , archaeologists need to use a great deal of interpretation to fill in the gaps in the evidence caused by the accidental survival of some remains while others have perished . |
10 | I had cigarettes , chocolate , fruit , allsorts stolen when that last batch of kids come in . ’ |
11 | A two hundred million pound blue print for the future of health care in and around Edinburgh has been unveiled by Lothian Health Board . |
12 | A two hundred million pound blue print for the future of health care in and around Edinburgh has been unveiled . |
13 | This special tool has a piece of quartz built in to it which releases energy — the spark — when it 's squeezed . |
14 | But a piece of bread lying in almost liquid mud will demand a more prolonged cleaning process . |
15 | Our response means that his constant offering of love enters in to complete our lives . |
16 | The perpetual light of Voltai came in through his long windows . |
17 | And then , as the pale light of morning crept in through the window , she was awoken by the feel of his mouth on her breasts . |
18 | From across the open stretch of ground hemmed in by the watercourse and the thicket , from at least half a mile away , I can clearly hear the engang preparing for the damburst of cattle . |
19 | This is where the Department of Trade comes in — and indeed where there is a tenuous and innocent link with Cecil Parkinson and last week 's huffy statement from his lawyers . |
20 | And this Mr he was , he used to c he well he was collec calling f with Mr and he kept calling with me the same so I used to order my bulk in October to come in for Christmas goods . |
21 | A coach back to the team 's hotel gave him enough time for a shower and snack lunch before going back to work — more throw downs , a second net against the quicks , and a burst of fielding practice before dusk set in . |
22 | It is also worth noting that they were concerned with an attempt by a defendant in proceedings brought in the county court by a local authority to challenge the relevant decision of that authority . |
23 | Then , right after he and Mr. Mendez left , a mustered-out soldier from Thomas came in looking for passage to Bisbee . |
24 | This is where that small mound of lava on Bezymianny comes in . |
25 | Then a scholarship to university came in for Sheila . |
26 | At a glance , the paper resembled a specialist publication like Motorcycle News , with elements of Socialist Worker , New Musical Express and the Mail on Sunday stirred in . |
27 | The initial tendency , on the part of both government and public , to assume that the Jacobite adventure would soon peter out , was replaced , as the news of the fall of Edinburgh and Cope 's defeat at Prestonpans sank in , by feelings of outrage and alarm , which were soon expressed in a fervent outburst of patriotism . |
28 | I mean I 've only got some figures here up to the twenty fourth of February , and in that particular week we sold about thirteen and a half thousand U K holidays , as against the week last year of about five and a half , so we 've obviously seen a fairly major growth in U K holidays , but , as I said , we spent about a hundred thousand pounds on promotion , so we 're very pleased with the uptake of business coming in . |
29 | As well as this lovely , uncompromising Romanesque church , the Quartier Sainte-Croix has some good old houses and is easily the pleasantest part of Oloron to walk in . |
30 | This change of style ties in with the special regimes offered by EC member states , which again focus on the attraction of specific types of activity in return for low tax rates . |