Example sentences of "[vb -s] [vb pp] in [prep] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Pietro has flown in from London and he 's assured me that as soon as the gang make contact the matter will be resolved without further delay . |
2 | As we predicted last month , the PC industry has fallen in behind Microsoft 's big push to promote Windows for Workgroups . |
3 | The Court of Appeal has struggled to reconcile the two decisions but has come in for criticism . |
4 | She 's established herself as a writer with award winning novels including ’ I 'm the King of the Castle ’ and ’ Woman in Black ’ but Mrs de Winter has come in for criticism . |
5 | The force has come in for criticism in the past two months after figures released on the constabulary 's ‘ crime-free day ’ in April showed Cheshire had suffered the highest rise in crime in the country . |
6 | Defence policy , too , has come in for complaint . |
7 | Information has come in from readers , amused , serious and knowledgeable . |
8 | Although the Gospel Outreach Centre in Clifton Road closed following a long-running row between church members and planners , a furniture business has moved in without planning permission . |
9 | There 's just that ripple of concern that has washed in from Albania . |
10 | If British tennis is to ever rise above the mediocrity that it has wallowed in for decades , then juniors have to be given greater access to courts and coaching . |
11 | The UK shares market has been one of the most buoyant in the world and over the past 12 months £80 billion has flooded in from investors . |
12 | Meanwhile the Campaign for Real Ale has weighed in in support of the Oxfordshire firm . |
13 | MY Mont Blanc fountain pen is en panne and has gone in for repairs . |
14 | It has romped in with profits of £5m since it was acquired from the Virgin airlines boss in June and should make more than Pounds 40m to £50m in the full year . |
15 | NEWS Corporation , the parent company of 20th Century Fox in the US and The Times , Sun and Today in the UK , has romped in with bumper first quarter figures . |
16 | Historically it has homed in on sociology as the generic symbol of reformatory zealousness , regarding its practitioners almost as ‘ folk devils ’ or bogeymen . |
17 | Bottle labels will still describe Perrier 's water as ‘ naturally carbonated ’ , although lots of extra fizz gets pumped in above ground . |
18 | I ca n't send her away — she 's come in from Chesmore . ’ |
19 | We tell them what 's built in by design and then we |
20 | They 're convinced some of it 's smuggled in for resale . |