Example sentences of "bring in [noun] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Even the Sioux Indians immortalised in Dances With Wolves are angry because it will divert money from their bingo halls which bring in revenue to poor reservations .
2 ‘ These workshops bring in people of mixed physical and mental disabilities , who are usually excluded from these sort of things .
3 Through Samara passed the chief railway lines from Siberia and Central Asia , bringing in diseases of all kinds from the east .
4 Their academic work has led to the formation of a specialist team bringing in colleagues from other disciplines including archaeologists and experts in dendrochronology ( dating by tree ring thickness ) .
5 ‘ If that does n't come off I will bring in players from junior football , ’ he said .
6 Of course not all of the elderly of the future will be relatively affluent , and , to repeat , we need to be alert to inequalities among the elderly — between age cohorts and within them : the cohorts who will be bringing more occupational pensions and owner-occupied houses into old age will also bring in experience of early retirement and early run-down of resources due to unemployment .
7 Then again , it might win the FA Cup and that will bring in megamoney from higher attendances and advertising , so the shares go up .
8 IF HISTORY is anything to go by , the legal action being brought in Britain by 3,000 patients against Wyeth ( a subsidiary of American Home Products ) and Switzerland 's Hoffmann-La Roche will either be dismissed or settled out of court for a pittance .
9 Yet the club brought in players from Second Division clubs and a Premier League club .
10 ‘ No action of damages where the damages claimed consist of or include damages … in respect of personal injuries to any person shall be brought in Scotland against any person unless it is commenced … before the expiration of three years from the date of the act , neglect or default giving rise to the action …
11 The ensuing publicity brought in commissions from all areas as Kos 's reputation grew and her work became widely known .
12 John Aiken , who wrote in 1797 , was also a doctor and he described apprentices brought in batches from distant workhouses to toil in " injurious " air by day and night .
13 This paper 's remarkable success in increasing sales between 1965 and 1969 not only showed what could be achieved by a powerful sales campaign ( which also brought in advertising at higher rates ) but also indicated that new purchasers of newspapers were not attracted to the party press , whose sales remained relatively stagnant .
14 Even at the club level I have always tried to bring in people from lower divisions because , sooner or later , the people playing low down will get higher up — some , not all of them .
15 Mr Lapointe defends the use of ivory money saying that he has managed to bring in funds from such sources at the direction of government members of CITES .
16 This brings in sanctions against foreign companies found to be contributing to the proliferation of these weapons .
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