Example sentences of "[noun sg] [pers pn] [adv] [verb] in " in BNC.
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1 | Some have come out there and then , while others have waited until later , like Ruth at a club I once worked in . |
2 | However , a firm may treat a client or counterparty as a market counterparty by virtue of its status as a member of a listed category only if : ( 1 ) The investment is of the right kind ; this will mean seeking information in advance from overseas persons as to the kinds of investment they regularly deal in and , if necessary , from exchange members as to the kinds of investment dealt in on the exchange ; ( 2 ) Normally , the firm notifies the client or counterparty in writing in advance that it will be treated as a market counterparty ( so that a notification is essential , except as referred to below ) and he has not told the firm that he does not want to be treated as a market counterparty in relation to the investments concerned . |
3 | I know it 's not his car 's number plate , or not the car he usually travels in , but ask if it fits his birthday in any way , or his phone number , or anything at all they can think of . |
4 | This despite the overtime he voluntarily puts in . |
5 | The hut she now lived in had been well built by a woodman more than three years ago . |
6 | The garden was one of the things Bert and Nellie liked about the Home they now live in . |
7 | But , as I say , again , it 's not a shop I often go in . |
8 | As a consequence they typically occur in very small groups and males therefore mate with fewer females each year . |
9 | As there will be no catch in this chaos we simply reel in and watch the merry-go-round . |
10 | Once I had been there a little while I really settled in and really enjoyed my primary school days . |
11 | Can it be that one day , off it goes on , that one day I simply stayed in , in where , instead of going out , in the old way , out to spend day and night as far away as possible , it was n't far . |
12 | The particular transaction concerned can be off-exchange ; ( 3 ) Overseas persons who regularly deal off-exchange ( in relation only to investments of the actual kind they regularly deal in , and related derivatives ) . |
13 | The word I finally got in was " No " . |
14 | It could have been her last name , or a state she like to exist in but I think it was a number involved . |
15 | A young child brutally killed , a mother in anguish because she turned her back for seconds : it is a reflection of the society we now live in . |
16 | It 's the kind of thing I really revel in ! |
17 | I know it was n't my birthday you just came in with it did n't you ? |
18 | The long button displays the underlying data form — in other words it lets you return to the form you initially filled in to create the slide . |
19 | The pity is that the world we actually live in is so full of evidence for a misanthropic principle . |
20 | On this same trip he also called in on Tersteeg — who sowerscomplimented him on his progress — and on another painter , de Bock . |
21 | He tried re-dialling two or three times , but either it was a long conversation or he could n't time it right to slip in between calls . |