Example sentences of "[to-vb] in on the [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | this one , look at the back , I think the reason it 's so big is to go in on the sockets at the back , put , you can put two tapes on it |
2 | I were just so psyched up on Wednesday and then I had to go in on the Friday before so I did n't |
3 | Tim Robbins , it was rumoured , might wish his American publicist to sit in on the conversation . |
4 | We 'll also want to sit in on the cochon gris 's ceremony tonight , if there is one . ’ |
5 | Free to smell again the sweat on the brow of the bourse ; free to bask in the slipstream of wide-bodied jets ; free to sit in on the counsels of the alleged good and the alleged great . |
6 | Opening the meeting of the Economic Planning Council , the Chairman , Lord Hampshire , surprised members by announcing that the Prime Minister intended to sit in on the transport debate , which was the subject of a White Paper about to be discussed on the floor of the House . |
7 | Well you 'll have to come in on the way ho |
8 | The local police kindly agreed to come in on the act and a few off-duty policemen pretended to stalk the burglars and locked them up for the night at a disused police station at Ironbridge ! |
9 | They had actually chosen themselves to come in on the study and so they were obviously schools which were particularly interested in involving parents as much as they could , and erm they would all certainly have done as , probably as much as most schools in the country are doing as , as far as involving parents are concerned , both in having parent helpers in the classrooms , and in having organisations for parents and social events for parents of the , of the fundraising type . |
10 | The horses could n't get inside the church , so the doors were left open for them to look in on the proceedings . |
11 | We 'll have to encourage him to put in on the table . |
12 | Despite an obvious desire to hold out against its bigger competitors , Phillips have been forced to give in on the issue of increased buyers ' premium . |
13 | Bills accepted by banks designated as ‘ eligible ’ banks by the Bank of England become first-class bills which the Bank of England is willing to deal in on the market . |
14 | One publisher to burst in on the media scene has been Dorling Kindersley , which came to the market in October 1992 at a price of 165p , valuing it at £102m . |
15 | Among a series of films designed to cash in on the success of Hitchcock 's Psycho ( 1960 ) , for example , was Seth Holt 's The Nanny ( 1965 ) , made with the visual flair of his earlier Hammer picture , Taste of Fear ( 1961 ) , and telling the powerful tale of two sisters , both dependent in their own way on the woman who brought them up , who pay no attention to the declarations of their son and nephew that it was nanny who killed his sister and now wants to kill him . |
16 | It 's always been around in comic culture , but as cynical publishers try to cash in on the success of Howard Chaykin 's gross Black Kiss , there 's so much of it that the powers that be have noticed . |
17 | Manufacturers are rubbing their hands in glee as they prepare to cash in on the success . |
18 | Targeted particularly at medium to large-size businesses , where the $35m privately-owned company is eager to cash in on the trend towards down-sizing , the software is particularly popular among manufacturers , retailers and service companies in the US , and banks in the UK . |
19 | In an attempt to cash in on the UK corporate market 's growing appetite for high speed personal computer graphics , NEC Corp has introduced its Image Series of desktops , launched in the US in February ( CI No 2,116 ) . |
20 | The Pineapple Spa was built in eighteen o seven to cash in on the craze for spring water and its healing properties . |
21 | Banks that want to cash in on the consolidation of American banking now under way may also need to rid themselves of property . |
22 | One or two offers of touring productions or guest star status in provincial reps came in , a sure sign that their managements were trying to cash in on the name of Michael Banks before it was completely forgotten . |
23 | Those hoping to cash in on the warrants issued with their shares may find the free gift is now an expensive invitation to buy . |
24 | A one million pound appeal has been launched by Oxfam which hopes to cash in on the fact that 1992 is a Leap Year . |
25 | A one million pound appeal has been launched by Oxfam which hopes to cash in on the fact that 1992 is a Leap Year . |
26 | Anyone else wanting to cash in on the end of the Cold War is advised to get a move on — there 's already been considerable interest in the Wroughton air yard and the agents expect to sell it by the autumn . |
27 | IF you ever lost track of time you would know it was Christmas from the barrage of sickly singles pumped out to cash in on the season of goodwill . |
28 | THE High Street banks were blasted for profiteering as they rushed to cash in on the interest rate jump . |
29 | Reading between the lines it becomes clear that it is the address which was recorded , in a studio re-creation to cash in on the President 's assassination . |
30 | Co-ordinated Land and Estates , which bought the Milngavie course from Stakis for an undisclosed sum last year , believe Dougalston , only minutes from Glasgow city centre and within easy reach of Glasgow Airport , is ideally placed to cash in on the golfing tourists . |