Example sentences of "[vb infin] in [prep] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Can you zoom in on that window then ?
2 You can zoom in on any area of the design by positioning a BOX around that area .
3 Here senior police officers sit in a windowless room , facing a bank of video-monitors and operating , by remote control , TV cameras which can zoom in on any area of the terraces or stands .
4 Can you cash in on unwanted space or possessions ?
5 The one-sided affair ought to have seen the hosts cash in on early superiority , even before Booth struck in the 31st minute to break the deadlock with a well-placed glancing header off Darren Ferguson 's corner .
6 The LIFESPAN Manager account ( Section 1.2.1 ) on each of the remote nodes provides these privileges , so you should log in to this account on each of the remote nodes .
7 The LIFESPAN Manager account ( Section 1.2.1 ) provides these privileges , so you should log in to this account .
8 The wonderful thing about literature is that great poetry can chime in on any thought or experience .
9 yeah , will you turn round straight please so I can clip in at this side good gir
10 Some of them will inevitably give in to that sort of intimidation .
11 To his great credit he comes up with no easy answers , but nor does he give in to glib despair .
12 No , she would enjoy this evening , she would let André entertain and amuse her , and she would not give in to useless introspection .
13 It it 's not his best side er his right foot but you know he can weigh in on that side but er he does have a hunger for goals .
14 Thus we are told , for example , that in the late 1980s there are 10,000 Latin American students enrolled in Soviet universities compared with the 144 who were attending Patrice Lumumba in 1960 ; that in 1982 Latin Americans could tune in to Soviet radio broadcasting for 105 hours per week compared with only 63 in 1962 and that at least seventeen Soviet journals are now translated and distributed in Latin America , six of which also appear in Portuguese ( Blasier : 1983 , pp. 12–13 and pp. 191–2 ; Goldhamer : 1972 , p. 147 ) .
15 There is also the possibility of genuine rotation which will fit in with other farm produce .
16 Despite heavy traffic , it did not fit in with British Railway 's policy , and also it suffered from Union intransigency. tickets were printed by the NER and its successors , and followed their standard designs .
17 ‘ How does that fit in with this idea of a universe that doubles back on itself ? ’
18 Okay that does not fit in with this style of newspaper .
19 It may be , of course , that such an inference is wrong , but , as discourse processors , we seem to prefer to make inferences which have some likelihood of being justified and , if some subsequent information does not fit in with this inference , we abandon it and form another .
20 There are many choices of frame that might fit in with this theme .
21 That does not fit in with any orthodoxy .
22 I was right on both counts , but it did not really sink in for some time that I had joined a charity .
23 But the money will not flow in on this scale for ever .
24 Staff say the government must step in with more cash
25 LABOUR 'S transport spokesman John Prescott could step in over British Rail 's plans to sell off a Darlington sports ground .
26 To tell us about the the little problem we reported on , reported on something we want to look at , we can home in on some activity .
27 After an efficient counter-attack , which may have been instigated as a ruse , the attacker can move in on another area of his target , one that may be wide open for an effective technique .
28 Chemical warfare would set in with appalling ferocity , leaving the sward slimy with dead worms .
29 Then , anything might set in after that job . "
30 I 'll talk to her ; I 'd rather you did n't butt in at this stage — and nothing for the record .
  Next page