Example sentences of "have [verb] in [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | Yes , but John Major has come in late . |
2 | Then the ice has closed in again . |
3 | The primeval forest has closed in again all around . |
4 | Since then the Ferrari car has competed in over 400 World Championship Grand Prix races , and has registered nearly 100 victories . |
5 | Instead , the siege mentality towards the accompanying press party , that has wrecked morale on previous tours , notably the 1986 trip to the West Indies , has set in again with a vengeance . |
6 | and see the er , decay has set in more and more and more . |
7 | But Trevelyan has brought in over a hundred thousand pounds ’ worth of Indian corn from America , all of it held in the Commissariat depots . |
8 | ‘ To get anything done at all , ’ says Freddie , ‘ one has to move in tremendously mysterious ways . |
9 | He bumped into some people waiting to join the queue for the seats in the reception area ( ha ; he 'd got in just before the rush ! ) , and went out through the doors back to the street and the bright sunlight . |
10 | But while the audience can relax in relative comfort in the mini auditorium which seats 200 , staff and performers have always had to work in rather cramped conditions in tiny dressing-rooms and offices that still have the old wall-paper on the bedroom walls . |
11 | But that would 've tied in again with , with the beginning because what is affordable erm would he get the benefits that he was wanting at the end of it . |
12 | Somebody could 've slipped in then without me noticing . ’ |
13 | Did you have to go in again ? ’ |
14 | 'I do n't have to come in tomorrow , I 've persuaded Carol to do my shift . |
15 | So I rang Paul and er he 's coming up tomorrow , he would have come in today had to go to but he 's coming in the morning to look at it . |
16 | Yes , I think it does something really nasty , you know , you could have got in again and just been sort of whiter than white just does n't work with the er , |
17 | In view of the technical advance implied it is thought that it was probably he who was the ‘ Mr Showers ’ who was complimented in 1692 for having played in hitherto impossible keys and ‘ with all the softness imaginable ’ ; but at that date the reference might conceivably be to his father or , less probably , his kinsman William . |
18 | ‘ You will have to give in sometime . |
19 | If either of your dislikes the other 's single friends , you 'll have to put in far more effort to keep them . |
20 | So that when we have the thing that he calls an annual review and I call a pain in the neck , I do n't actually have to put in very much work to come up with the fact that no , I 'm not going to give him a salary increase , erm , because I have his , his performance , you know , already researched throughout the year . |
21 | However , this remarkable literary work — even given an army of fans as keen as his niece — would not have brought in very much income , nor would the journalism , and it was to be assumed the trust provided the rest . |
22 | Lucenzo could almost have walked in yesterday . |
23 | My Lords if this bill had been introduced by a government of a different political persuasion to the present one , I would of course have spoken in precisely the same terms as I do today and I believe that in circumstances of that sort , the overwhelming majority of this House would have taken precisely the same view . |
24 | And others that you would n't have gone in anyhow , but they were areas . |
25 | So he said you 'll have to stay in then wo n't ya ? |
26 | To sue out the livery of lands worth £22. 7s. 4d. per annum a man would have to pay in all £45 6s. 6d. in fees to officers of Wards , Chancery , and Exchequer . |
27 | Will I have to break in again ? |
28 | We 'd go barefoot in the fields and play fairies , and horses and keepers : the horse would have to step in as many cow shits as possible and the keeper would have to clean it up from between their toes . |
29 | You 're very thick are n't you , , no you must 've stay in probably . |
30 | Even then the older amongst them could look back to the early 1790s when debate about , and the practice of , abstention from slave-grown colonial sugar was claimed by Clarkson to have drawn in about 300,000 families . |