Example sentences of "of [adj] [noun] [verb] in " in BNC.

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1 However , just before the point of order was raised , a group of Labour Members came in and raised , on spurious points of order , allegations against the Secretary of State for Health arising from matters that did not appear in the report .
2 For these he used ‘ mainly major pentatonics with a bit of chromatic stuff thrown in ’ .
3 The City expects the Chancellor to alter but not altogether abandon the rule , effectively reducing the amount of gilt-edged stock bought in by the Bank of England .
4 But to be faced with the short-term threat of redundancy at the hands of private contractors brought in by the health authority would mean that they might feel subject to a considerable degree of provocation .
5 The courts first began to take obscenity seriously as a result of private prosecutions brought in the early nineteenth century by the Society for the Suppression of Vice , dubbed by Sydney Smith " a society for suppressing the vices of those whose incomes do not exceed £500 per annum " .
6 This will be a meeting to discuss the provision of low cost housing in and it will be more of a committee meeting with representatives from the Parish Council , the PCC , Wyre Borough and one of the housing associations .
7 Perhaps the work-load is high at the time , looking at the map and the ground for possible clues as to where they are , looking for signs of possible lift to climb in , together with all the other little worries involved in a field landing .
8 ‘ I do n't remember anyone of that name coming in . ’
9 The memory of that morning flooded in , making her cringe inside .
10 Those with turpentine , for instance , flew southwards if they had been trained in a loft with the smell of that compound blowing in from the north , and northwards if they had learned to smell it from the south .
11 The inrush of fresh air came in through the room , circulated , inter mixed with the vapour laden air in the lounge .
12 An unprecedented entry of 43 teams brought in a charity bonanza with BNFL raising more than £10,000 — the best effort yet in eight years of competition .
13 Once triggered , however , a process of cumulative causation sets in .
14 Unfortunately not all discourse types , especially the less formal ones , have their own overt terminology , and we should avoid burdening students with the kind of specialized metalanguage employed in , for example , the analysis of a school lesson by Sinclair and Coulthard ( 1975 ) described in 4.3 .
15 The introduction of a full programme of four-day cricket comes in next season , despite strong protests from Yorkshire and several other counties .
16 When you have tired of building sand castles and the donkeys are having a break , there are plenty of interesting places to visit in and around the town .
17 It must be appreciated that the spelling of Latin names varied in much the way that today Catharine , Catherine , Katharine , Katherine , Kathryn and Catrina are , for example , versions of a single form , hence in the list only the more obscure renderings are given .
18 ‘ And the competition of another striker coming in can be good .
19 This year 's model … new stuff with a couple of old faves thrown in .
20 Men in blue overalls with newspapers sticking out of back pockets wandered in .
21 I share John Main 's concerns , as reflected in MG Minutes of 7. ix.93 , over the volume and nature of public enquiries coming in to the Garden , because many of them are now being directed to the Library .
22 News of public events poured in ceaselessly through the German loudspeaker and the secret wireless .
23 After completion a random block of 12 months brought in £172 : 1s. : 3d .
24 When they started to gather for another push , the second wave of mounted police went in , scattering the pickets right across the field .
25 Held 2–8 March , the fair enjoyed twice as much space in its new premises , the Grand Palais , as it had done in its former venue , the basement of the Hotel George V. Still an all-French affair despite the eagerness of foreign galleries to get in , this year 's Salon was the first to include nine contemporary dealers , including Gerald Piltzer who made a last minute decision to join in .
26 The variety of foreign bodies found in and around the genitalia is enormous , but , like the previously mentioned causes of urethritis , they make up but a small proportion of the cases of urethritis .
27 Such conditions are all too rare today ( works bought for public institutions like the Tate disappear from view for decades together ) , and it must have been a factor in the decision of some artists to give in the first place .
28 One programme , which I will call the action at a distance theory , regarded electricity as a fluid or particles of some kind residing in electrically charged bodies and flowing through electrical circuits .
29 AT THE recent European soccer championships in Sweden a quiet black man was sitting in the airport lounge when a group of Scottish fans came in with their wives .
30 As the queue of would-be emigrants handed in their names , Nicholas Winton spent every spare hour collecting guarantors and publicising his cause .
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