Example sentences of "[vb mod] [verb] in [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 So we can put some limits on the project : the chairs must be upholstered ; modern in the simplicity of their lines but not ‘ Cubist ’ for want of a better term ; easy on the eye and bottom ; they should fit in with other existing furniture ; and naturally should be of strong construction so that they will be heirloom quality .
2 Day care should be viewed as only part of a strategy and should link in with other locally based resources .
3 ‘ We should go in for wholesale demolition of buildings from the Sixties and Seventies .
4 Is it not an attack upon the integrity of a man to alienate him from those actions which spring from his deep convictions in order that he might fit in with utilitarian calculations ?
5 Thus we are told , for example , that in the late 1980s there are 10,000 Latin American students enrolled in Soviet universities compared with the 144 who were attending Patrice Lumumba in 1960 ; that in 1982 Latin Americans could tune in to Soviet radio broadcasting for 105 hours per week compared with only 63 in 1962 and that at least seventeen Soviet journals are now translated and distributed in Latin America , six of which also appear in Portuguese ( Blasier : 1983 , pp. 12–13 and pp. 191–2 ; Goldhamer : 1972 , p. 147 ) .
6 LABOUR 'S transport spokesman John Prescott could step in over British Rail 's plans to sell off a Darlington sports ground .
7 " Do it like Edrich , " we 'd plead in between hysterical laughter .
8 ‘ I see it as culminating in an annual event , perhaps a convention and a festival which would tie in with other events like Africa Oye .
9 Chemical warfare would set in with appalling ferocity , leaving the sward slimy with dead worms .
10 Even those who thought that spatial perception would stand in for technical ability at age thirteen felt that the match between the specific ability and general intelligence was too close to allow it to generate a specialised educational form .
11 Very soon , someone would come in with uncomplicated news of the day ; someone ordinary , a nuclear physicist or a brain surgeon .
12 They would come in with different agendas .
13 They may come in in little pieces , but if the pieces can be stuck together the results usually show inside of their first forty-eight hours .
14 Hopefully this time the bolts will stay in for good , as chopping and replacing them ( something which now seems an annual event ) is causing untold damage to this superb pitch .
15 There is also the possibility of genuine rotation which will fit in with other farm produce .
16 I have my doubts whether he will fit in at Old Trafford .
17 On the return journey we will drop in on Lylehaven Farms and Connant Acres , both herds with an established reputation for producing show cows and exporting top quality genetics around the world .
18 and do n't forget water will go in with capillary attraction
19 Badawi romped home in an Ascot ladies race last time and looks the best bet of the day in the opener at the Lancashire track , while Young Buster will come in for strong support in the Rose of Lancaster Stakes after his defeat of Twist And Turn at Doncaster .
20 It should rise above the personality cults that will come in with religious advertising on television .
21 They can cash in on good ideas from staff and benefit from many small improvements and occasional large leaps forward .
22 They also have a ‘ stand by ’ appointment scheme , where you can ring in at certain times at half an hour 's notice , where prices range from £4 to £7 .
23 Maybe recording what they 're doing , leading them , and the teacher can come in at appropriate moments to help it along .
24 I bought a pass for the swimming baths so I can get in for free .
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