Example sentences of "[coord] [verb] in to the " in BNC.
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1 | Use it at 1½–2 ounces ( 43–57g ) per square yard ( square metre ) in spring and summer , hoed or dug in to the soil . |
2 | Pottering down to the library to exchange Colin Thubron for Jonathan Raban or dropping in to the Jacaranda Tree for a mushroom omelette , everything can seem orderly and secure . |
3 | But I had neither stumped up for a bale of fluffy bathroom towels , nor chipped in to the Qantas ticket . |
4 | At Bragança there was no response from the tower as we transmitted our intentions , landed and taxied in to the little apron . |
5 | You want er you want a letter carried by hand and given in to the hand of Douglas MacArthur ? |
6 | I took the ferry back to Picton , drove to Christchurch , and moved in to the flat in the university Hall of Residence which had been reserved for me . |
7 | The french windows were closed and he drew his gun and peered in to the gloomy apartment . |
8 | Young and fit and keyed in to the processes of organisational power . |
9 | Lesley turned smartly left as the lights changed , and wound her way by back-streets to the parking-ground on the edge of the shopping centre , a multi-storey monstrosity of raw concrete , at which she gazed with resigned distaste as she crept slowly up to the barrier and drove in to the second tier . |
10 | Thousands turn up for parties every weekend and tune in to the national radio show he does with Djaimin . |
11 | I curled up in the shade of the parasol and tuned in to the natural static . |
12 | Brawner recalls the young Mario as being ‘ real hard-working and ambitious ’ and tuned in to the cars as if they were human beings . |
13 | Machine-franked mail must be faced , securely tied in bundles and handed in to the post office . |
14 | She just wanted to sink back into the dream and give in to the lovely floating sensation . |
15 | He slid the holdall between her legs , on the floor pan , then walked round and climbed in to the driver 's side . |
16 | One man was killed and another two people injured when a car overturned and smashed in to the front wall of a house . |
17 | Sean ( Being really sad and coming in to the library on a sunday to do some work ) |
18 | A con man was arrested and brought in to the police station . |
19 | Later this year a third intake will be built and linked in to the system which will automatically transfer raw materials to the mill . |
20 | So got rid of him at last , wrote Harsnet ( typed Goldberg ) , and went in to the glass . |
21 | He decided to be generous and went in to the shop . |
22 | It was absorbed and went in to the Carrick Herald and the Aire Advertiser , and now they 've all gone . |
23 | Cos if you g if anybody go down there now they could see where what we call the Pier Head , so ships had to go up there and turn in to the lock gate . |
24 | It helps , for example , to improve hip abduction ( used in roundhouse kicks when the kicking knee is lifted to the side ) by sitting with the soles of your feet together and close in to the body . |
25 | Collecting up her leaflets , she made her way up to bed , and gave in to the little grin that had been trying to break out a few minutes before . |
26 | One was that some members of the public were unaware that they need not pay and gave in to the pressure of successive threatening letters . |
27 | Overnight , as passengers slept soundly in their cabins after a long day ashore , or the more hardy danced and gave in to the temptations of the midnight buffet , the Ocean Empress had weighed anchor and begun to move south again , until , shortly after dawn , the silence of the engines pronounced her arrival in Tenerife off the west coast of Africa . |
28 | Any points similar to these which arise from any section of the application form/c.v. should be noted and taken in to the interview as a reminder . |
29 | She had arranged to lunch with friends at the Lion d'Or at Cologny and call in to the clinic afterwards to see one or two patients . |
30 | Under his direction , the Ulster Constitution Defence Committee maintained its traditional line that O'Neill was not responding to the legitimate demands of a disadvantaged section of the population , but giving in to the demands of rebels who would never be satisfied with anything less than the destruction of Northern Ireland . |