Example sentences of "in to [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | A male teacher in To Sir With Love actually instructs his female pupils in ladylike behaviour , modesty , charm and attractive appearance . |
2 | All media , apart from government-controlled radio and television , have been totally silenced , and Haïtians caught tuning in to Voice of America broadcasts are arrested and beaten . |
3 | It is therefore folly to give in to behaviour of this kind , and you should try to prevent it by being aware of the situation when it may arise and not responding as the dog demands . |
4 | So really I need to firm up with them , I 've dropped the seeds in to firm up the process and they 're going to work through that with the kids at the same time talking about what a record of achievement is , showing them what goes inside it , the importance of it etcetera . |
5 | The same kind of mistake — usually entirely hidden from the people with the opposing views — can easily creep in to discussion about more serious matters . |
6 | of perhaps my characteristics cos I tend to go in to work at eight o'clock just before I write any more in and I do have to clear everything before I even start the day . |
7 | The artist was one of the so called Bevin boys , who were drafted in to work as miners during the last war . |
8 | I ca n't believe they 're just gon na leave me to go in to English on my own . |
9 | Become adaptable , so that you can come to the point quickly or ease in to conversation through some social chit-chat , as appropriate . |
10 | A sole practitioner , Mark Ledger , was brought in to head up the Salisbury office , which Ms Harris had set up prior to the merger ; the new firm set up an insolvency department under Geoffrey Morgan ; and 18 months later another sole practitioner , Philip Parmenter , was brought in to set up another office in Witney , Oxfordshire . |
11 | Dustin knew he was coming in to Broadway with Jimmy Shine and did not relish the idea of making a film and simultaneously appearing in a play , especially as the production was having problems on the road . |
12 | " You 're both going in to school on Monday , are n't you , Martha ? " |
13 | Archer books in to history with new mega-deal |
14 | The 43-year-old millionaire has been brought in to shake up Central Office . |
15 | The prince will fly in to Split from the aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal , stationed in the Adriatic . |
16 | They then returned to the Print Room , while guests went in to luncheon in the Great Hall . |
17 | I mean like er Mark now , if he 's paying in to pension for his firm , they can do what they like with it . |
18 | If the nearly-invisible Mrs Shephard is the John Major of parliamentary women — the glamorous Mrs Bottomley , 44 , is more like an old-fashioned ambitious networker , closely plugged in to politics by virtue of both her birth and her marriage . |
19 | It 's now clear , my Lord Mayor , what the Labour Party has transferred has transferred it 's opposition to Right to Buy in to opposition towards the new Rents to Mortgage . |
20 | SOUTH AFRICA 'S under-fire coach John Williams refused to give in to pressure as the row over the Springboks ’ rugby tour of France deepened last night . |
21 | NMFS caved in to pressure from the tuna industry , and claimed that it was possible to place observers aboard only 50 per cent of tuna seiners for the season beginning 1 January 1989 . |
22 | Friends of the Earth accused the government of " caving in to pressure from property developers and abandoning proposals that would have protected the public from accidentally buying contaminated land " . |
23 | Day 2 I travelled to Kasuma calling in to tabora on the way , ( about 4 3/4 hours . ) |
24 | Hello there , erm I was calling in to sort of object to the erm whole presentation of recent events in the , in the Soviet Union . |
25 | Many retailing organizations said they gave fixed-term contracts to seasonal workers brought in to cope with the Christmas peak . |
26 | John Sinclair , who runs Cliveden so successfully as a luxury hotel , and his attractive wife , guests went in to dinner in the dining-rooms . |
27 | Tack was left some money in his mother 's will and decided that he should give up his job and go in to business for himself . |
28 | In spite of being a small-town solicitor , Mr Hann is tuned in to information on many of the world 's financial deals . |
29 | If the country and the House have refused , since then , to give in to terror — despite all the horrors that have been inflicted against humanity on the mainland and , especially , in Northern Ireland — why should the leadership of the Provisional IRA and its fellow travellers , wherever they may be found , conclude that we shall give in to terror during the next 21 years ? |
30 | The regulations , which will affect new care home residents after April , mean those residents who go in to hospital for treatment will receive the new ‘ residential allowance ’ for only six days . |