Example sentences of "he [vb past] in with [art] " in BNC.

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1 He got in with the wrong crowd up at .
2 Once he had decided on his man he moved in with a determination that usually beat the carefully-laid plans of other interested clubs , often to dramatic effect .
3 When we started rehearsing , we arrived at the cello 's first entry and he came in with a dreadful slow grumbling noise .
4 He came in with a long stride , with head erect , and calm authoritative eyes .
5 They were a bit big for me but they were lovely and dry and I was feeling great when he came in with a bottle of champagne .
6 He came in with a teacup in one hand and a piece of bread-and-butter in the other hand .
7 In those days he came in with a His coachman brought him in the trap and they got the twenty minutes past seven express train to Glasgow .
8 And half these buggers would n't recognize him if he came in with a label on Rugby supporters , pah !
9 He solved her problem because when he came in with a very satisfied-looking Candace Rainford beside him he came straight over to Maggie .
10 Faldo just stayed in touch thanks to putts of 15 and 30 feet at the 14th and 16th for a round of 69 , while Ballesteros felt he had been robbed when he came in with a 68 .
11 Lillywhite , from Walton-on-Thames , started the day with just 20 seconds to spare over Norway 's Ole Simensen , who jumped from ninth to second place when he came in with a four-strong leading group in Liverpool City Centre .
12 This young lad about probably about twenty three , twenty four , and he came in with a cigarette and I said excu excuse me but I 'm afraid it 's a no-smoking area .
13 He came to see you , he came in with a fag , wafting it around the place
14 He came in with the ideas , give the drivers and conductors everything they asked for whereby my training had always been to only give them what they were really entitled to , not give them anything extra but he gave them the earth and that erm did n't sort of go very well for the new Manager who came in , he had a lot of undoing to do there , that this fella had given away , in his six or seven weeks there .
15 Seeing the poverty around him while he was growing up , he joined in with the political groups agitating for social change .
16 Finally he broke in with a rush , ‘ Would your goat have lost her collar , Mrs Totteridge ? ’
17 On his way to his tent , he fell in with a captain who told him gloomily that three men had individually been sent in to find and blow up the magazine , and all had presumably died .
18 After Eton and a spell as a waiter in the United States , he fell in with the exotic Soho underworld of the day and found himself earning £500 a week , very good money in 1961 .
19 Back from Cuba , his belief in non-violence now a fading memory , he fell in with the dope-smoking radicals of the key young radical movement , Students for a Democratic Society .
20 He kept in with the Soviets in case Moscow ever prevailed in Bucharest — plus the extra money he undoubtedly obtained . ’
21 For the purposes of sensationalism and drama it would be pleasant to report that he burst in with a look of alarm and a shout of excitement , or some fancy combination of both .
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