Example sentences of "[vb infin] [to-vb] [adv prt] in the " in BNC.

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1 Well you do n't want to go out in the car so stop and do a bit of painting .
2 Course it worried Ange look cos she do n't want to go back in the office like last time .
3 You do not want to find out in the interview itself that the skirt rides up disconcertingly high when you sit down or that the front gapes open when you lean forward to talk .
4 Despite being part of a happy close-knit Jewish family , Alison could n't wait to go out in the world to do her own thing .
5 Control of your performance is achieved by the combination of attitude and power , and it is essential that you should know just what the attitude and power is — in various configurations — for every performance you might need to set up in the aircraft you normally fly .
6 I ca n't wait to get back in the house .
7 Women 's increasing commitment to the labour market does not appear to pay off in the way that would be expected if people were actually rewarded according to their ability and effort .
8 Those who knew him remember an amiable man , but not necessarily the sort of person you 'd expect to end up in the White House .
9 " Nenna , would you like to come out in the dinghy ? "
10 And this man said that he was a lay reader , and that he 'd retired , he 'd come back from Australia , and he though that he would like to help out in the parish .
11 I can literally push the bird out of the tree into a net or a box so I can take it home , because it ca n't see to fly off in the dark .
12 The immediate task was then to get a secure temporary roof across the whole building so that the interior could begin to dry out in the spring .
13 report and the management accounts because there are a number of things which have since , since these minutes er completed and we 'd like to bring up in the report but er I think that we 'd be as well to look at the
14 Some Tory MPs believe that Mr Lamont may decide to step down in the face of the unrelenting doubts about his future at the Treasury .
15 How much does it take to go up in the balcony , more or less ?
16 Everything 's got to be sorted out I think her pram and her other desk is gon na have to go up in the
17 ‘ She 'll have to go down in the fattening fields with the cows . ’
18 I 'll have to go back in the house because I 've got two odd gloves on .
19 But it became clear that she would soon have to go out in the rain and get a bus to their sister convent .
20 And do n't get so drunk that you ca n't stand up and have to sit down in the middle or , worse still , can not speak at all .
21 Companies behind with their accounts and returns submissions will have to catch up in the next 12 months .
22 ‘ Working with Tracey is much easier than a group because you would have to stand around in the group and not get a chance of doing things .
23 ‘ I 'll have to come back in the summer without the boots to play properly ! ’
24 ‘ We wanted to play Dublin but all the venues were booked out months ago , so we 'll have to come back in the New Year and do somewhere like the SFX or the Stadium .
25 She would have to walk back in the afternoon sunshine , or find somewhere to rest .
26 Mum , what do we have to do out in the garden ?
27 Clive Barker ( 1977 ) of Warwick University has given new substance to the use of games in the training of actors and Brian Watkins ( 1981 ) has evolved a theoretical framework conceptually linking drama and game in a way which I shall attempt to build on in the next chapter .
28 He had to wait until nine o'clock to telephone the garage , and he had been told they had no time that morning and would try to get down in the afternoon .
29 My brother and I used to have a joke — we saw how hard our father worked — that we would only consider medicine if we could become specialists in venereal diseases , because we would never have to get up in the middle of the night and we would never be out of work .
30 So likewise the Saturday nights here , I 'm alright I do n't have to get up in the morning .
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