Example sentences of "[det] [adj] [noun] [vb past] in " in BNC.
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1 | so anyway she said anyway er she 's had this bloody Aga put in , you know she had that other Aga in did n't she ? |
2 | There are no mother-in-law jokes , although inevitably a few ethnic ones slipped in . |
3 | Then another urgent whisper broke in on her thoughts . |
4 | The weather was good throughout , and since coming back we have had some real summer at last — with some dreadful days mixed in . |
5 | And I went down to this bird 's down by the library two weeks ago and this same fella came in with a gram and he was like that , giving out big smokes . |
6 | Er it 's partly using some questions that 've been around for a very long time but there 're some subtle variations and some new ones added in , okay ? |
7 | This other bloke came in and joined 'im . |
8 | Then this Other Guy moved in with him ( do n't think it |
9 | Another expensive car pulled in behind her , and Robert recognized Mr Shah , the man from whom they had collected Hasan last summer . |
10 | Another weeping woman staggered in off the street . |
11 | Her voice , clear and pure , soared up to the roof of the theatre , and when it picked up the words of the chorus of ‘ My old man said follow the van … ’ , no one in that vast hall joined in , they just listened . |
12 | So these poor people came in and I s it was actually it was an Argosy club night . |
13 | These two guys came in . |
14 | This creative period was followed by an exploitive period in which many theoretical physicists moved in to apply the new mechanics to a host of significant problems . |
15 | Others actually sliced into the vitrodur with their monomolecular edges and lodged there like so many tiny pitons hammered in to a precipice — an irregular , minimal ladder of discs , a coinage with the face-value of death , leading back skyward . |
16 | All three Brownies joined in to explain . |
17 | At the end of the Gulf War , many many people wrote in to the BBC saying , ‘ why are n't you keeping going ’ . |
18 | At the end of the Gulf War , many many people wrote in to the BBC saying , ‘ why are n't you keeping going ’ . |
19 | However , you 'll see that Le Preziose is opaque from the start thanks to all those eggs blended in by Buitoni , and as it cooks the yellow colour becomes more intense and golden . |
20 | There may be infection in the many small glands found in and around the urethra . |
21 | How many other twenty-two-year-olds stayed in on a Saturday night just listening to the rain hurl itself against the windows ? |
22 | And , imagine all that loose change brought in for the gambling machines bouncing high like metal sparks . |
23 | The White House said it would also pay $150 for each Panamanian gun turned in . |
24 | Hoomey scooted to his feet , but several interested parties moved in to deal with Jazz before he could make a tactful retreat . |
25 | From the extreme British northern flank , the same dismal reports came in . |
26 | The arguments before us ranged far and wide , as they did before the judge , but in the end they resolved into the following issues which I propose to consider seriatim. ( 1 ) Can a non-trading corporation sue for libel in respect of its governing or administrative reputation when no actual financial loss is pleaded or established ? ( 2 ) Does the right to freedom of expression affect the position where the non-trading corporation is also a public authority ? ( 3 ) Does the operation of section 222(1) of the Local Government Act 1972 , or any other matter contained in or omitted from the council 's statement of claim , preclude the council from continuing with this action ? |
27 | During my visit this year , several local people popped in to buy a chunk of freshly made cheese , which was cut straight from the truckle and cleanly wrapped in greaseproof paper . |
28 | Until then , Mellor had stood in the face of the scandal as each new wave rolled in , sucking the ground from beneath those famous toes . |