Example sentences of "[adv prt] in [adv] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | I can sit down in 'ere a bit , ca n't I ? ’ |
2 | This was closed three years ago — Peter Craine , Rabbit 's vice president for marketing and sales , explains that the firm then did n't have any national language support for its MS-DOS products ; also , Unix — Rabbit 's favoured environment — had n't taken off in quite the way the firm had expected . |
3 | The intention of the government , as remembered in evidence to the Royal Commission on Local Government in 1925 , was ‘ to set up in nearly every County a Local Authority which he called a provincial Parliament ’ ( quoted in Hampton 1966:463 ) . |
4 | The first thing to note is that a chase should be built up in exactly the way you built up the whole of your book . |
5 | ‘ Hang on in there a minute , my lovely . |
6 | Distillation may be carried out in either a batch process , using a pot still , or a continuous process , using a patent or Coffey still . |
7 | The act of giving the child a name , which accompanies the baptism , is not explicitly brought out in either the term ‘ baptism ’ or the more commonly used ‘ christening ’ , since the latter , obviously , means making a Christian of the infant . |
8 | Now , now we actually here and we 've only got erm a short time to get round these people , very very short time , erm and get this back in otherwise the ballot will go against or for with no members voting . |
9 | He was back in just a couple of minutes , and his face was set into dark , angry lines . |
10 | A company often thinks that it can let space for a short term — say two or three years — and then move back in once the business climate has improved . |
11 | back in about an hour and a half 's time so erm that 's good timing actually . |
12 | But can I come back in there a bit . |