Example sentences of "have [verb] in [prep] [art] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Resident outside the airfield 's motel for nearly 30 years , it was beginning to look very much the worse for wear and , as other Ouragons have given in to the ravages of time , attract the nearest of museums . |
2 | A major supermarket has just unveiled four new Teenage Mutant Hero Turtle pizzas and Dr Mumby says the way the foodmakers have jumped in on the Turtle band-wagon is wrong . |
3 | But the job of captain remains the same : you have to work in with the coaches , motivate the players and gain their respect . |
4 | More than 50 orphaned or injured otters from all over Britain have come in to the trust 's rehabilitation centre in south-west Scotland . |
5 | Labour Members say that they want to have a debate , yet because they have been discomfited in other debates they have come in to the Chamber to start shouting and jeering . |
6 | What 's happened is , of course , that as the costs have fallen and the micros have come in through the door so they 're very much smaller , erm it all becomes possible for the whole of society and not for a tiny elite . |
7 | OVER the past two years , Swedish investors have come in from the cold . |
8 | The majority of domestic workers are young women without any formal education who have come in from the countryside . |
9 | Tonight , though , they rarely come across as well , because instrumental fluff and dead wood have crept in between the sharp spikes . |
10 | The undertakers have moved in as the middle-men , the ‘ third party ’ , who handle all the unpleasantness and worrying details of death . |
11 | And during the day speckled shower clouds have moved in from the west . |
12 | By imagining these two kinds of plant , we have zeroed in on the crucial difference between a bottlenecked and an unbottlenecked life cycle . |
13 | Several young emerging stars in a wide range of sports , in similar pressurised situations , have caved in under the intense media spotlight . |
14 | Ask around among advertising writers and you will find they have got in through a dozen different doors : journalism , the entertainment business , being secretaries , or just by having a go . |
15 | According to CUP , the trade in the UK and Ireland has been ‘ magnificently supportive ’ , with almost 200 window displays of the Oxford Cambridge Book Race design , and entries have flooded in for the competition to win a holiday in Pompeii . |
16 | As many as 300,000 people , many of them farming families who have flooded in from the villages , are clamouring for survival . |
17 | In practice , if not in spirit , there is a complete divorce between the ground floor , full of people who have walked in off the street , and the upper floors , where research and development on both hardware and software for the Third World take place . |
18 | I think we have gone in at a very sensible price , and I am sure the other contractors did . |
19 | It 's really not hard at all ; you just have to dive in at the deep end . ’ |
20 | But if you do feel like it , you only have to call in at the shop . |
21 | For the first six months they have to live in at a training centre . |
22 | On a day-to-day social basis the kennel staff , all of whom have to live in at the training centre , interact closely with the students . |
23 | Millions have tuned in to the tapes to spice up their sex lives . |
24 | At the end of the day I had the satisfaction of presiding in the Lords debate on the Bill and noting the very last words in Barbara Castle 's account of the affair : ‘ Now , unexpectedly , I have received a letter of ‘ appreciation ’ from Harold for the ‘ hard work and long hours ’ I have put in over the consultants ' ‘ package ’ . |
25 | ought to be said really , since Alan is not here and is erm is resigning , well perhaps that could come a little later on because I think both Joan and Alan er there should be some record other than this about the work they have put in for the Society er I mean the only idea I have , I do n't know how much of a a precedent this is , whether , whether anybody should be offered life membership of the the society or is that only for do you have to reach a certain age |
26 | Now yes this is very very welcome indeed , but I do see it Mr Chairman in the experience of the past and that really with the hard work that you both have put in as a piece of paper it is now in the computer as far as I can see and I think there is a term now within agriculture and I will give you an example of this and I think it now , it may apply I think to our road system particular particularly in the north , north Suffolk , yeah I think the term is set-aside , and I hope that some time central government will acknowledge that within this eastern region certainly the Lowestoft area and Waking area we have very great problems , because these pieces of jigsaw do not come into the full picture , they 're put in place now and then and later and in apparent it is giving us a very great problem certainly within the last |
27 | I think they have to , this is why we have to get in at the beginning , and be , be part of the structure . |
28 | The ‘ front ’ warned for our area by the weathermen is still some kilometres away so , although high clouds have spread in from the west already , only a few little ‘ cats ’ paws ' of wind ruffle the sea surface . |
29 | And do n't be feeling that you have to stay in with the family . |
30 | On that basis , the CAP has not protected the small farmer because large , efficient farms have cashed in on the guaranteed payment scheme and produced huge quantities of food , using increasingly intensive methods . |