Example sentences of "[is] [adv] [verb] in to " in BNC.
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1 | More recently we have learnt that the functioning of the immune system , that exquisitely coordinated mechanism protecting us from disease , is intimately tied in to levels of stress . |
2 | The drawing suggests how a sector of resources has been ignored and is not linked in to the over-all plan . |
3 | This is just giving in to your Ego , which loves to play ‘ Ai n't I awful ! ’ |
4 | She 's probably crept in to be with her father . |
5 | So it 's automatically built in to the first life assured , but it is an option for the second if they want it . |
6 | The City Research project is now moving in to its second year and has already seen the publication of three reports . |
7 | She is now settled in to her new home , which she shares with another Rottie and a German Shepherd . |
8 | In Baroness Lemberg 's creepily ornate fortune-telling parlor the lights are on and the baroness ( Miss Page ) is supposedly tuned in to the truth . |
9 | Yes , but one I mean one of the things that I think is often smuggled in to discussions of class is value judgements erm along the lines of one class is better than another . |
10 | This orthodox view does not really rest on factual evidence , though such evidence is sometimes brought in to back it . |
11 | MICHAEL DOUGLAS is currently booked in to a £500 a night clinic in Arizona to cure his addiction to sex . |
12 | I mean operators have made big steps and big investments in the last two or three years in upgrading facilities on whether their holiday centres , you know , cottages , boats , centre parcs , that type of thing , and that is good quality business and erm it 's certainly coming in to us . |
13 | And their flagship , Somerwest World at Minehead , is certainly tuned in to the tastes of 1992 . |