Example sentences of "and [verb] in [prep] the " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | The system is flexible and fits in with the user 's way of working . |
2 | It admittedly makes intuitive sense , and fits in with the general observation about staffs ' professional identities being a function of their research identities . |
3 | An administrative culture — which is concerned with rules , roles , authority and fits in with the concept of a role culture . |
4 | He said the key to SmithKline 's success was its ability to market and sell brands and cash in on the potential of new products . |
5 | Trim them back , dead-head regularly and bring in before the first frosts and you should have flowers for months to come |
6 | At Bragança there was no response from the tower as we transmitted our intentions , landed and taxied in to the little apron . |
7 | You want er you want a letter carried by hand and given in to the hand of Douglas MacArthur ? |
8 | But she has this threatening jacket , a dark linen one which she can pop on over the Lycra , and it has big shoulders and big assertive buttons and nips in at the waist , and this means , ‘ Fun I may be , but business is business and I will rip your arms and legs off in the boardroom if you let me . ’ |
9 | They could not open the door , so they climbed down from the roof and got in through the window . |
10 | Stepping out of the stables , she opened the half-door of the Lagonda and got in on the driver 's side . |
11 | I took the ferry back to Picton , drove to Christchurch , and moved in to the flat in the university Hall of Residence which had been reserved for me . |
12 | The missiles would climb out of the atmosphere , using a two stage rocket motor , and home in on the heat emitted from a target satellite . |
13 | The whole dinghy was jammed and sucked in under the stem , then rolled over , held fast by her steel mast which would not snap . |
14 | Throughout our recent evolutionary history , particularly since the rise of a hunting way of life , there must have been extreme selective pressures in favour of our ability to co-operate as a group : organized food gathering and hunts are successful only if each member of the band knows his task and joins in with the activity of his fellows ; a good deal of restraint on natural impulses during the stalk and capture of the prey is likewise essential . |
15 | He affixed a small jewellers ' eyeglass to his eye , and peered in at the device 's workings more closely . |
16 | The french windows were closed and he drew his gun and peered in to the gloomy apartment . |
17 | They walked briskly over to the two cars and Plumpton bent down and peered in through the windows of the Mini . |
18 | Bodie nodded towards the door of Flat 30 and Doyle stepped across to it , dropped to a crouch and peered in through the letterbox . |
19 | At last , under the cover of a black moonless night , Grandfather Denknetzeyan stole over to the house and peered in through the kitchen window . |
20 | It was a slow , infuriating process , and as A roads gave way to B and Robyn neared her destination already two hours late , the slowly darkening skies became as black and as desperate as Robyn 's frame of mind , until the heavens opened and it started to pour — not reasonable , perfectly acceptable drops of rain from a warm July sky , but pounding , penetrating torrents that battered and bounced off the roof of the jeep and seeped in through the ill-fitting windows . |
21 | Young and fit and keyed in to the processes of organisational power . |
22 | Well I mean it 's , it 's well as soon as , it 's , well did you write in and object in within the time ? |
23 | And Pilger , an exasperatingly prickly individualist determined to expose the ills of the world , stubbornly refused to lower his standards and fit in with the new requirements . |
24 | It is thought to be exploring how insurance risks compare and fit in with the other financial risks it already manages routinely for customers . |
25 | Across the highway , the driver of the second rig swung his wheel hard over and accelerated in through the gap in the wake of the three fire tenders . |
26 | OTHERS have preferred to select the right machine for the duty and ground conditions and hired in for the job . |
27 | Lesley turned smartly left as the lights changed , and wound her way by back-streets to the parking-ground on the edge of the shopping centre , a multi-storey monstrosity of raw concrete , at which she gazed with resigned distaste as she crept slowly up to the barrier and drove in to the second tier . |
28 | As the sea is calm I turn in to a narrow cleft on the headland , cutting the engine and gliding in between the faces of grey rock to let my passengers get the flavour of the sights and sounds of a Shetland geo . |
29 | He could see the grey ruffled silk of the sea on the left as they banked and came in towards the airport . |
30 | He added : ‘ I qualified in 1948 and came in with the health service . |