Example sentences of "take [adv prt] in the " in BNC.

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1 But if a school sees itself as a community school , giving out as much as — or more than — it takes in in the shape of benefit to individual pupils , the manager must decide with some or all the partners on which aspects of community education to concentrate .
2 The first solo , tabbed last month , was in the key of E. This second solo takes off in the key of F , although the two-note pickup is played over the last beat of the final bar of E.
3 ‘ If it takes off in the States , the sky 's the limit , ’ he says .
4 ‘ Mick sometimes takes off in the wagon , but he 's only too pleased to get back to Chigwell .
5 They would take off in the event of a German cut , which would make lower UK rates more likely .
6 Explain and justify the options you would take up in the case of : even additions ; random additions ; , grouped additions ; no additions .
7 So that was a contrast from the people near the hospital where I was and , what happened was , we used to do a little service and then anybody that wanted to be seen used to come along and we needed an interpreter and it was a bit like a surgery really , and they would come with any problems , and anyone who was severely ill we would then take back in the Landrover back to the hospital .
8 The problem is that UK households , like US ones , are struggling to repay the debts they took on in the boom years of the 1980s , he explained .
9 RoboJay took over in the morning .
10 The 38 lenders are also thought to have been told that trading is worse than at any time since the current owner took over in the late 1980s .
11 Ormanroyd under pressure from Stone , Moores comes in and free kick has gone Leicester 's way and er poor old Frank Clarke has found a mountain of problems at Nottingham Forest as he took over in the summer .
12 His younger brother , Scott , took over in the second period with a series of his extra-special , last-gasp tackles which reminded one of Victorian melodrama .
13 Making up yardage charts started in America in the late 1950s , took off in the 1960s and came to Britain in the 1970s .
14 In Europe the craze for motoring took off in the twenties and thirties , helped in 1931 by the launching of the first cross-Channel ferry specifically designed to carry cars and their passengers .
15 On another occasion , a cow made a mad dash from a herd being driven along Crane Bridge Road , managed to dive onto the slope leading to the old ford by the bridge , took off in the Harnham direction and swam almost a mile before the drovers caught up with her .
16 As Bodie took off in the cab , he flicked on his R/T and contacted Monteith , on watch again from across the road .
17 I just wonder what the security was like at the base from which that plane took off in the States . ’
18 Third , when facilities management first took off in the US , suppliers were dealing solely with mainframes , and could earn higher margins from significant economies of scale — several mainframes were centralised on one site , and could deal with the information technology requirements of many customers — and so the old bureau service was recreated under another name .
19 This seems to indicate that after a fairly steady climb and a certain standstill in the late 1880s , the numbers really took off in the late 1890s and the first decade of the twentieth century .
20 Social hygiene took off in the years immediately before the First War as part of the growing debate over national health and efficiency .
21 They took off in the dark .
22 Before the property boom took off in the 1970s there were still cheap flats around in London .
23 Professor Breen has suggested that the American consumer market took off in the 1740s .
24 Although FDI had been substantial from the beginning of the twentieth century , it really took off in the 1950s , as a result of the flow of funds from the United States into Europe aher the Second World War .
25 Er we did n't always know what was going on but erm , we did catch the planes when they took off in the morning and we watched them come home in the afternoons and we got some ideas sometimes when things had n't gone quite right and I 'm sure we did share with you in your grief .
26 Their attempts to abandon many of the ideas and ideals of classical democratic theory were immediately challenged by other theorists ; while their celebrations of actually existing democracies founded on lukewarm politics and " a mainly passive electorate " were countered by the marked revival of popular activity and radical commitment which was already taking off in the late 1950s when these texts were being written and published .
27 And i if the man in the field had got a grudge against a bloke who was stacking i or taking off in the stack yard he could make life hell .
28 They were few in number , but attracted an attention out of all proportion to the space they took up in the exhibition .
29 This is one aspect that art historian and critic Deborah Cherry will be taking up in the next issue .
30 Now he then comes on in the second part of the report to look at the fourteen great achievements and I mean two things A what are those achievements and do those achievements back up and support these kinds of very general maybe propaganda kind of stances that Mao is taking up in the first part of this report .
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