Example sentences of "[to-vb] in [prep] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | New York drug dealers seem to go in for sophisticated marketing ploys . |
2 | The GLCABS basic training structure described in detail earlier , allows the trainee to sit in with experienced advice workers to observe their techniques . |
3 | Bloke supposed to come in for new business pitch will have got there by now . |
4 | ‘ Well , that 's the first thing we have to make him see , then we need to get him to come in for regular counselling sessions . ’ |
5 | Then offers started to come in from other amp and electronics companies , asking me if I wanted to branch off and do some design work for them , which I could see the advantages of — plus I wanted to have a life ! |
6 | Going to listen in to actual conversation . |
7 | Tributes have continued to pour in for British Team Manager Les Jones , who died after the European Indoor Championships in Genoa . |
8 | for love to walk in before closing time . |
9 | He was angered , and for a moment was tempted to reply that Louise herself had managed to fit in to French society , despite her origins and her antecedents , but he curbed himself . |
10 | The previous result has been restated to fit in with new accounting standards . |
11 | Western practices and ideas were modified to fit in with Japanese reality — though there were periods when ‘ Westernization ’ was very much the vogue . |
12 | The hood is designed to fit in with standard kitchen units or can be fitted on its own over a freestanding cooker and is available in white or brown . |
13 | SLIMMING down of staff at a North Wales nuclear power station to fit in with modern technology and reduced power generation has meant 100 jobs being lost in the Trawsfynydd area over the past 12 months . |
14 | Most models are 60 cm ( 24 in ) wide to fit in with average counter tops . |
15 | Most models are 60 cm ( 24 in ) wide to fit in with average counter top measurements . |
16 | The demand for elegance carries with it the requirement to fit in with existing furniture and although talking points can be useful , a table surrounded by a set of such chairs could be a positive eyesore . |
17 | Some employers will not allow you to ‘ job share ’ officially , but may be open to revising your job description to fit in with local service needs . |
18 | For example , if you have to undertake practical work ( e.g. placement with an organization ) as part of your course , who obtains that placement and how closely does it have to fit in with academic training ? |
19 | Damian Casey was fined £160 for failing to weigh in on fourth-placed Tribute To Dad . |
20 | Grass leys , grazing catch crops , and crops grown to plough in as green manure all enhance fertility . |
21 | They may also be grown to plough in as green manure . |
22 | But Sun/Star readers were less interested in politics even than Mirror readers ; and they were the least likely to tune in to highbrow news programmes such as Newsnight , Channel 4 News , or Radio 4 news . |
23 | Within the limitations imposed by his hosts and his own inhibitions and scruples , the anthropologist has to mix in with local society and become the life and soul of the party . |
24 | We can not simply allow ourselves to cash in on private sector industry at the expense of the many unemployed and low-paid whose living standards will inevitably decline as a result of the spiralling costs of wholesale privatisation . |
25 | Capital city of crime is Frankfurt , Germany 's banking centre , where mobsters like to blend in with legitimate wealth , washing their illegal gambling and drugs money , stealing their luxury cars and working their financial scams . |
26 | — TOP PREMIER League clubs are set to move in for ace North-East star-spotter Peter Kirkley , who has been sacked by Newcastle United . |
27 | Start to turn towards the centre-line when the LOC needle starts to move in from full-scale deflection . |
28 | The cutters were then ordered by a signal flashed from the clifftops to close in at top speed . |