Example sentences of "[art] [adj] [noun] [to-vb] in " in BNC.

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1 Nor is it possible to have a membrane with pores of just the right size to allow in needed substances from outside but not let essential substances escape , if only because the cell may need to retain some small molecules , and admit some larger ones .
2 ‘ And he 's the right man to go in and get the truth . ’
3 We were perhaps selected by someone with a sense of humour who thought that we might be the right couple to bring in a Queen 's Speech which increases the penalties for mutiny in prisons .
4 It 's just a question of finding the right people to bring in and form a fashion-design group .
5 But much of Operation Gemini is about surveilance , observing known criminals and waiting for the right time to move in and make arrests , of which there have been more than a hundred and twenty since the operation started four weeks ago .
6 The facts are there there has been a staggering rise in attacks and murders this union must take the lead we call for the British government to bring in legislation to ban the evil nationalist and fascist political parties , and insist that government strengthens legal protection for third country nationals .
7 He knew only too well what would happen ; no doubt his stepfather would have the daily help to come in and take care of him , but as far as the business was concerned , it would likely be whipped from under him by the many land sharks who would prey on the defenceless old man without the slightest compunction .
8 The recent decision by the French Government to give in to their farmers on the lamb war only underlines the position .
9 She pushed her damp curls from her face , and went to open the french doors to let in what wind there was tonight .
10 This , at its most exalted , represented the aspiration of Owenism ; and though few Owenites would have heard the song , when the time came for the countless host to stream in through gates of pearl , that surely is what they could have sung as they marched .
11 ( They disport themselves to accommodate the next piece of mime , which consists of the PLAYER himself exhibiting an excitable anguish ( choreographed , stylized ) leading to an impassioned scene with the QUEEN ( cf. " The Closet Scene " , Shakespeare Act III , scene iv ) and a very stylized reconstruction of a POLONIUS figure being stabbed behind the arras ( the murdered KING to stand in for POLONIUS ) while the PLAYER himself continues his breathless commentary for the benefit of ROS and GUIL . )
12 It is the function of the cognitive analyser to perform in exactly this way and thereby to relate the organism more closely to environmental and social change .
13 Initially , the new subsidiary will act as a listening post on the Japanese market to assist in better fulfilling Japanese market requirements .
14 For the elderly who have some form of infirmity , the normal daily routine of keeping the body clean and disposing of its waste products can be exhausting , hazardous , and , in some cases even painful when the back must be bent and the limbs slowly manipulated into the appropriate positions to get in and out of the bath , and down and up from the lavatory seat .
15 After we have chosen the appropriate remedy to give in LM form , the first choice , after the potency , is how much of the granule is the patient to take i.e. the dose , how often it is to be repeated and for how many days are they to be on that particular potency .
16 It might be necessary to do a deal with the Liberal Democrats to bring in a ‘ variety show of all the talents ’ .
17 You 're giving them the perfect opportunity to cut in again . ’
18 Mountbatten 's especial qualification in Attlee 's eyes for the job of viceroy was his success in getting the Burmese nationalists to come in on the British side in the closing stages of the war ; it was Attlee 's firm belief in later life , as indeed it was Mountbatten 's , that if Mountbatten had been left in charge in Rangoon , Burma would never have left the Commonwealth .
19 Just before he was due to pack his case , tidy the papers on his desk for the last time , and go home , Spittals was surprised to receive a call from the commander of the Squad , who asked the chief superintendent to call in before he went home .
20 I made my way round the house and crossed the mossy terrace to look in through the drawing-room window .
21 In smaller countries people are much happier , the ideal country to live in is a small one ! ’ he claims .
22 The skill of sailing the board at an angle , allowing the downwind rail to dig in and therefore providing more sideways resistance .
23 A one-piece suit also has the added advantage of keeping your pullovers pulled down over your back , leaving no gaps for the cold air to creep in .
24 There were , of course , the inevitable forms to fill in and letters of condolence to answer , but I realized that I had not for a moment , since before the previous Christmas , given a thought to the prospect of life for one .
25 A combination of the two features can result in the remarkable ability to fly in near zero wind conditions .
26 After Chatichai 's re-appointment , both the SAP and the DP refused offers to join a new coalition , forcing the Prime Minister to bring in Prachakorn Thai ( PT ) and Ekkaparb .
27 Having had the good fortune to fall in with Gabriel outside Cat 's Coffee Shop as she was on her way home , he had seized his chance and asked her for an early supper .
28 Unstoppable , and so tailor-made for success it 's like them lying there , legs akimbo , waiting for the major companies to come in and shag the ass off them .
29 And it makes it easier for the slash-and-burn cultivators to get in rather than sort of coming in gradually round the edges , there are now great swathes cut through tropical rainforest at Amazonia certainly , and the Trans-Scabon railway is about to be put through which again will make it easier for the sort of to come in , and I think that should be bourn in mind .
30 Would not it be legally wise and politically sensible not to go ahead with the compulsory order to bring in bulldozers until difficulties with the European Commission and local people have been resolved ?
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