Example sentences of "[subord] [adj] [noun] [verb] in " in BNC.
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1 | Left again , after the brewery ( where they still have the Porter Tun Rooms , a tun being a big barrel not a weight , though not many people know that ) is Whitecross Street and the Barbican entrance , where many tourists go in and some actually find the theatre or gallery they 're supposed to be going to . |
2 | There is no doubt that Cnut disposed of this threat , but where Holy River fits in is unclear . |
3 | This does not directly tell us anything about the ‘ weakness ’ or ‘ strength ’ of UK manufacturing , but it is interesting to note the sectoral distribution : UK multinationals in the food , drink and tobacco industry export more capital through this route than comes in ; in mechanical engineering the inflow greatly surpasses the outflow , while in electrical engineering UK multinationals export more capital than foreign firms bring in . |
4 | Microsoft must foresee where the market is going , where and how to direct its effort — and do so better not just than lively young rivals eager to up-end it like IBM , but than powerful companies moving in from outside the industry . |
5 | More than 870,000 viewers tuned in FREE to West Ham against Derby in ITV 's London region . |
6 | As reported in the Financial Times , he said that the trade union movement would be demanding and , he hoped , achieving the implementation of the proposals for industrial democracy ; and that the next decade would offer the unions a better chance than any other to bring in the desired change . |
7 | The purchase price of each unit was chiefly related to its area , although other factors entered in , such as the amenity offered by the single private garden . |
8 | But although other ships put in — merchantmen from Spain and France and Italy — the weeks turned into months and still João did not arrive . |
9 | They reckon that if each machine brought in $192 a day ( a claim the Las Vegas experts call unrealistic ) , and if the owners let the state pocket 90% of it , the state could earn more than $196m a year ; and it could put the money towards education . |
10 | ‘ There was little possibility of the school being able to provide such an area until British Gas stepped in with their generous offer . |
11 | Reliability is much to , much more to do with replicability , it 's , it 's another if another researcher went in and did it the same way , would they get the same results ? |
12 | How could you help it if some chap drops in with flowers ? ’ |
13 | ‘ Not as much as it would if real trouble set in , ’ he retorted drily , then brushed the subject of her wounds aside by glancing at his watch . |
14 | Sheep automatically seem to connect people with food , so that they become bothersome and , in some cases I saw , dangerous as they tried butting until harassed walkers gave in and handed over some of their food . |
15 | It is perhaps dubious to argue that a prayer or worship becomes more efficacious if more people join in , but there is no doubt that man was created a social animal and ritual that is shared is ritual that becomes more meaningful . |
16 | In a very acute illness the remedy may need to be repeated every hour or two at first until sustained improvement sets in . |
17 | If there was in operation a good system to prevent alien matter entering the lemonade then someone who worked there must have been very negligent if alien matter got in despite the system . |
18 | For the morning , if any emergencies telephone in , my aunt and I would have to leave immediately to deal with it . |
19 | The practitioners say if enough people joined in , meditation could even end the fighting in Bosnia . |
20 | If Soviet soldiers get in to the parliament there will be a bloodbath . |
21 | Alejandro did n't like dead mares around ; it looked bad if potential buyers dropped in . |
22 | We 're not actually gon na trigger them unless Madreidetic refuse to give in . ’ |
23 | In addition to filling the significant gap which has arisen because this group falls in between the usual area specializations ( Turkish/Anatolian and Caucasian ) the project will also contribute to several fields of current debate within economic anthropology and ethnic studies . |
24 | Because some people came in and had offered sixty , that 's what I was told , the last lot that came in had offered sixty . |
25 | ‘ I spend an hour like that — shitting myself — till this guy comes in and says , ‘ We 've decided to believe your story . |
26 | ‘ I know that people suggest that because one striker comes in , another goes out . |
27 | But if the claimant is not represented and does not attend , the success rate falls to one in twelve , while unrepresented attenders win in about one in six cases . |
28 | While this date fits in reasonably well with the tradition about Seyyid Serif and Molla Fenari , Tritton 's identification of the scholar mentioned by Ibn Hajar with Cemaleddin Aksarayi is open to question . |
29 | A couple of anachronisms fighting it out here while real life moved in on them from the east almost unnoticed . |
30 | Last year , RTE earned IR£64.7m from TV advertising , while all newspapers brought in IR£108m worth of ad revenue . |