Example sentences of "of [noun sg] [verb] in " in BNC.
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1 | Their Lordships therefore consider that the profits accruing to the taxpayer on the grant of sub-licences during the relevant years of assessment arose in or derived from Hong Kong and as such were subject to profits tax under section 14 . |
2 | Telephone lines to the city were jammed and messages of support flowed in from other student bodies . |
3 | He says there 've been messages of support coming in . |
4 | Howling for vengeance , the followers of Chaos closed in . |
5 | Most late nineteenth-century feminists saw feminism primarily as a movement for moral reform , which would of necessity bring in its wake desirable political and social change . |
6 | Then the reams of drug anecdotes stop , and a highly confused sense of responsibility ambles in , concentrated on the cosily strung-out ‘ My Drug Buddy ’ . |
7 | With a sigh , Emily sank back in her seat and closed her eyes , listening to the clip clop of horseshoes ringing against the roadway with a feeling of unreality closing in on her . |
8 | But it could always of course come in as an odd . |
9 | erm We had to look for some lower riders and erm Tony Primmer of course comes in at four , which helps us immensely . |
10 | The commercial procedure of dégorgement crept in in gradual steps sometime in the latter part of the eighteenth century , or soon after , and might have been the producers ' response to an increasing number of complaints about their clouded wines . |
11 | Well by showing that their dependents will need that sort of income to come in . |
12 | Adorable 's favoured method of song construction is to start with a slow , dreamy melody and then accelerate to Warp Factor 11 with very loud , sharp and combative peals of guitar swooping in to rough up the tune and kick it momentarily off course , before Piotr grabs hold of the melody again . |
13 | The amount of money put in by the public . |
14 | To do this enter +B1*B3*12 into B5 to calculate the total amount of money paid in and +B4-B5 into B6 to work out the total interest received . |
15 | Also , keeping band accounts is useful to familiarize you with the practicalities of money coming in and going out . |
16 | ‘ Though he had large sums of money coming in , it appears that Mr Morgan was insolvent , ’ she says . |
17 | There was no great amount of money coming in and one was continually minding the pennies . |
18 | The papacy 's reputation for venality may be more closely related to the difficulties of collecting what was due to it than to the actual amounts of money coming in . |
19 | So there 's a lot of money coming in they could they could afford to have somebody like that |
20 | In the Late Minoan period new styles of burial came in , the larnax burials . |
21 | This Jewish atmosphere is the main memory from the film , along with Melanie Griffith 's character development , and a bit of action thrown in . |
22 | Eugénie loved the sea and was a strong swimmer even though at Biarritz she found that ‘ the sea was very cold and it required great strength of mind to get in ’ . |
23 | Drawing on the re-evaluation of emotion characteristic of contemporary feminist theory and practice , she argues that feminist conceptions of emotion constitute a critique of dualist conceptions of mind found in much Western philosophy in the English-speaking world and elsewhere . |
24 | Won agreements to end the dumping of chemical sludges in to the North Sea . |
25 | The first of these sets the amount of effect coming in from the JMP 's effects loop — a really good idea and all amps should have this in some form . |
26 | As he pushed it open a powerful gust of wind swept in from outside . |
27 | It is not obvious , in reviewing this system , exactly where the element of indirection came in , except in so far as the Residents were instructed to maintain at all costs the ‘ prestige ’ of the emir . |
28 | As well as this lovely , uncompromising Romanesque church , the Quartier Sainte-Croix has some good old houses and is easily the pleasantest part of Oloron to walk in . |
29 | However , a firm may treat a client or counterparty as a market counterparty by virtue of its status as a member of a listed category only if : ( 1 ) The investment is of the right kind ; this will mean seeking information in advance from overseas persons as to the kinds of investment they regularly deal in and , if necessary , from exchange members as to the kinds of investment dealt in on the exchange ; ( 2 ) Normally , the firm notifies the client or counterparty in writing in advance that it will be treated as a market counterparty ( so that a notification is essential , except as referred to below ) and he has not told the firm that he does not want to be treated as a market counterparty in relation to the investments concerned . |
30 | Wool we had big bales of wool come in and once wool was packed together and banded , that was heavy . |