Example sentences of "[vb base] in [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | A former bus driver is staging an all night sit in outside the offices of a training organisation he claims forced him out of a job . |
2 | And significantly , her boss and colleague sit in on the trial , revealing their emotional investment in what 's at stake . |
3 | sit in on the public |
4 | Erm it was actually somebody who came for an interview and you know how you sit in on the presentations when you do the group presentations ? |
5 | In previous years the banks have been lined with marquees offering hospitality as riverside farmers cash in on the regatta … even though they have virtually nothing to do with it . |
6 | He said the key to SmithKline 's success was its ability to market and sell brands and cash in on the potential of new products . |
7 | At Crackington Haven , flanked by the soaring cliffs of Cambeak and Pencannow Point , Atlantic rollers crash in on the tide . |
8 | And when I say rock , this is the dynamic blues-Clash-U2-alternative type , not the stuff stadium/metal bands make in between the pubs opening . |
9 | There are no hotel bills , they chip in for the petrol and food and everybody 's happy . ’ |
10 | Tackle loose stair treads in a similar way , mailing the front edge to the riser below , and piping glue in at the back . |
11 | Bung in a card , plug in to the LAN , and your humble workaday PC has become a sexy , hi-tech LANstation . |
12 | — Plug in to the mains ( you may need to plug in player and monitor separately ) ; |
13 | That the services they provide are relevant to environmental groups , and in that way to help environmental groups plug in to the kinds of advice on fund raising and er , management and all sorts of other aspects of running a voluntary organisation , which , at the moment , of , er a lot of , er social service organisations plug into , but so many environmental groups . |
14 | The fifteenth hole is short but dangerous ; its plateau green is ringed by bunkers at the front and sides and the trees press in at the back in a claustrophobic way — a nightmarish hole if you are playing badly . |
15 | And we always home in on the cost of a full page . |
16 | The eclipses of December 9 , 1992 , and those on May 21 , June 4 and November 29 in 1993 all home in on the area of profession and your personal hopes and dreams . |
17 | Both convergent and divergent modes of thought are necessary for a creative act to occur : the writer must actually arrange his freely associated ideas into organised prose or the scientist finally home in on the solution to a problem . |
18 | But if researchers home in on the record as the first level of access , ignoring the surrounding administrative context and archival structure which forms part of its meaning , will understanding be fostered or impaired ? |
19 | The missiles would climb out of the atmosphere , using a two stage rocket motor , and home in on the heat emitted from a target satellite . |
20 | Insects that fly in at the sides encounter a vertical baffle of netting that divides the trap along its axis , and tend to fly or clamber to the highest point of the baffle where the only way out is into a collecting jar . |
21 | Bees fly in through the windows on hot afternoons , zig-zag across the house , and disappear through the open front door . |
22 | And , by Royal Appointment … the Russian swans fly in through the fog . |
23 | ‘ You are a success to them if you fit in with the culture , particularly when they have gone thousands of miles and built up the clubs themselves . |
24 | The chapter will therefore end by taking a look at recent and forthcoming developments in manufacturing to see how these fit in with the idea of generic strategies and their implications for accounting — i.e. not just now , but for the foreseeable future . |
25 | Sixthly , how would the possible creation of such a German unity fit in with the Helsinki process , and would it promote a constructive evolution of that process in the direction of ending the division of Europe and progressing toward integrated legal , economic , ecological , cultural , and information environments in Europe ? |
26 | fit in with the portrayal because |
27 | An important point is that these large-scale convection cells fit in with the dimensions of plates . |
28 | In the attic they uncovered an exciting collection of 19th century Cambridge University calendars year books which fit in with the fact that Mr Edelson was closely connected with Trinity College . |
29 | Again the question there , How does the O D B C fit in with the Microsoft and er future ? |
30 | The table and chairs and windowboxes all fit in with the period of the house . |