Example sentences of "be [vb pp] in to [art] " in BNC.

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1 I listened with interest to my hon. Friend the Member for Stamford and Spalding ( Mr. Davies ) , who almost conveyed the impression that he had been parachuted in to an Amazonian jungle in which democratic accountability plays no role , and that we needed the benefit of a judgment on arbitrage and merger policy from New York city .
2 Mr Doogan — who had previously been let in to the site at Aldermaston , Berks — claimed a new rule banned Irish people .
3 He felt like a moth that had been sucked in to a candle flame , but the fluttering was in his chest .
4 Fido has been booked in to the kennels down the road and Fluffy has Mrs Jones coming in to feed her — but what about the fish ?
5 This procedure is akin to the methods now being used for computerised medical diagnosis , where the symptoms are fed in to the computer and the most likely illness is predicted .
6 Most Brother machines gave weaving brushes which are built in to the sinker plate .
7 Product differentiation is the process by which specific features , characteristics and attributes are built in to the product or service So that the consumer perceives it to be in some way different from ( and preferably superior to ) competing products .
8 IF you 're tied in to a high mortgage rate it might be worth your while doing the switch .
9 The paying-in slips are completed and the cash and slips are handed in to the bank cashier who will check that they are all correct , stamp the counterfoil and retain the paying-in slip .
10 I 've been called in to the Museum during the night or at weekends for a variety of reasons .
11 Might the Mr Chairman I was just wondering if it 's worth just mentioning that the , since the Redhill Airport proposal which does include a privately funded motorway link erm point erm has gone to and has been called in to the determination I believe by the Minister , but er we are sort of pending er holding our horses until that er er is nearer the time is that not perhaps
12 I too desired to be at home , and was glad when we were able to close our own dear front door behind us , and be gathered in to the silence of our little parlour .
13 She never presumed on her friendship with Eve by expecting to be let in to the inner sanctum .
14 One is hammering on the front door of Elland Road asking to be let in to the VIP suites .
15 All faults must be written in to the book by the person making the report .
16 Requests for consumables ( printer ribbons , disks , computer paper etc. ) , software , and small hardware items ( T-switches etc. ) should be written in to the Consumables Book in my office .
17 Faults and computer problems should be written in to the Fault Log kept by the Computer Support Officer , Mr Stephen Marshall .
18 Does he agree that the private sector electricity industry makes it ever more important that safeguards should be built in to the process so that the need factor and the environmental impact are taken into account ?
19 In principle , the idea of holding Open Days is a good one , but these events need to be planned at least two years in advance , so that funding , manpower , and equipment resources can be built in to the estimates for all those Garden Departments which will be involved .
20 Continuity and progression have to be built in to the programme and there has to be scope for differentiation and extension .
21 There 'll be a group making pots out of clay or out of plasticine ; there 'll be a group doing sums ; there 'll be a group working with the microcomputer , and that can be incorporated in to the group work pattern , and it can also be incorporated into the sort of topic and project work that a primary school does .
22 Please pray that many viewers may be able to share in that worship and find it helpful and that some who would otherwise ‘ switch off ’ will be drawn in to the programme and more importantly to the Lord Himself .
23 Registered mail has to be handed in to the post office , which issues an official receipt .
24 And when , after lunch , she came downstairs in her new outfit , bought from Selfridge 's last week with the money which J. D. O'Connor had paid her for her articles , and with her next two articles in her bag , ready to be handed in to the great man himself before she returned to the rectory to pick up Rose Bailey , whose time off did not begin until four-thirty , both Dr Neil and Matey thought that she looked enchanting .
25 In a public library authority this can require all titles from all service points to be called in to a central point and their condition checked and compared .
26 4 The same piece of string , 36cm long , can be pulled in to a lot of different rectangles all having the same perimeter , but different areas .
27 The literature review will be set in to a general policy context of recent developments in the UK vocational training field .
28 Information has to be taken in to the brain — often through the eyes but this is only because humans rely so much upon this sense .
29 Such information will be taken in to the evaluation procedure by the Press .
30 Do not turn up with an extra child to be fitted in to the same appointment .
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