Example sentences of "[not/n't] [adv] [verb] in [prep] " in BNC.

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1 there 's women darts , there 's mens darts , and they might not all come in till about nine o'clock , but they are only like , two hours
2 The reader is always aware that although he knows and mostly likes the people he is writing about , he is not necessarily taken in by their ideas .
3 As Crawford , Winner and the ten-person film unit prepared to start work in the War Memorial Gallery , not exactly blending in with the surroundings , those on the floor of the Stock Exchange looked up , started screaming and shouting , and threw paper darts .
4 Rarely did any Tiller Girl stand out in a glamorous way but stunning was always the word used to describe Violet Bryant nicknamed Ginger because of her glorious red hair , she could not possibly blend in with the others .
5 I was right on both counts , but it did not really sink in for some time that I had joined a charity .
6 A few minutes ' walk away the Boulevard Gallieni has been renamed the Boulevard Soummam but it is still spectacular : wide enough for the sun to congregate here for most of the day , not simply dropping in for an hour as it always has to in the canyon streets of Manhattan .
7 A word of caution : we dare not simply burst in on others with a glibly phrased formula and expect them to be warm with forgiveness .
8 Bollinger own just such a patch of phylloxera-free vines in Aÿ ; whereas its high walls might well repel a small army , it remains a mystery why the little bug has not simply walked in under the gate .
9 Wells , who worked for Geary 's at 22 Cross Street , almost opposite Oliver 's tobacconist , had described a man in the near vicinity whose description did not completely tie in with many of the other witnesses .
10 and the deferred pensioners are not actually getting in on the debate , they 're not often represented on the trustees in fact .
11 It 's possible she may have developed ideas which … do n't necessarily tie in with mine . ’
12 If he did n't constantly barge in on her thoughts and drive everything else out of her head , she would n't be having any of these problems .
13 You ca n't just walk in off the street and say ‘ I want to study a degree in neurophysiology or erm or chemistry even . ’
14 ‘ These people ca n't just blow in with their grand illusions about what they can do in Northern Ireland , with this ‘ big brother ’ attitude that America can solve everyone 's problems .
15 Now do you think anybody who was n't already tied in to that wanted to get tied in at that time ? ’
16 ‘ I do n't normally go in for public displays of affection , ’ he murmured , ‘ but you 're irresistible .
17 ‘ I do n't normally go in for public displays of affection either , ’ she murmured impulsively , forgetting her uneasiness , ‘ but even with sand on your face you 're … ’
18 You do n't normally come in on a Saturday .
19 The new technology element does n't exactly creep in in this business either ; personal computers , laser printers , document scanners and the like are vital elements of the system .
20 The trouble is , I 'm a member of the Dock workers ’ Union as well , and the Brotherhood does n't always fall in with what the Union recommends .
21 In the eyes of such politicians , industrial managers were not seen as the creators of the nation 's wealth , and the providers of job opportunities for the people , but as despoilers of the environment ; obsolete men , peddling obsolete views , who did n't really fit in with the new social scheme of things .
22 Besides it does n't even go in till about about every hour .
23 It did n't quite fit in with her theory .
24 ( Sometimes people drift off and dream up indicators which do n't adequately tie in with the end result . )
25 thinking about it , you 're saying the appraisal thing do n't actually link in with the tree the team .
26 They did n't actually go in for sabotage or anything , did they ? ’
27 So everything 's there , printing presses repro separation houses , sheet film , computer set up and Apple Macs and everything is there , it 's actually a very impressive set up erm , the Queen Margaret 's course , I 'm slightly dubious about I once had a colleague I 'm going back a decade who had been employed on the basis of doing the communications course at Queen Margaret I think , and it turned out that it was n't communications as we understood it , it was n't our sort of communications P R newspapers and things like that , it was communications on a much broader , broader front so it did n't actually fit in to the world of P R and what happened was I then had to sit down and train this woman from scratch and get rid of a lot of the preconceived notions that she had come in with she had brought from Queen Margaret 's College .
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