Example sentences of "be [vb pp] in at " in BNC.

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1 The chart needs to be filled in at the time the child eats as retrospective memory is unreliable .
2 Some settlement is likely to take place over a period after the trench has been filled , but this can be filled in at a later stage .
3 ‘ So how shall your time be filled in at the barbecue ? ’ he queried with an unmistakable edge to his voice .
4 Instead we leave the pictures to be stripped in at the printers , and get a better image as a result .
5 A fill can be dropped in at any time while the pattern is playing .
6 A fill can be dropped in at any time while the pattern is playing .
7 Questioned , Swayne stated that the animal had been let out at approximately 9.30 on Saturday evening and was crying to be let in at a little before midnight .
8 Hence there must be a facility for storing the cross- reference until it is required , and a system by which the editor is reminded that that cross- reference needs to be written in at the other point ( earlier or later in the text ) .
9 However , with a little diligence and help of the single end of a transfer tool , they can sometimes by unravelled in the work and since the end is fine it can be darned in at the back .
10 For proper ventilation , cool air must be drawn in at the base to replace the hot air that has been extracted .
11 Alternatively , material can be handed in at the Emmaus Evenings held at Dehon House on the first Friday of each month .
12 Alternatively , material can be handed in at the Emmaus Evenings held at Dehon House on the first Friday of each month .
13 If anything had been brought in for you it had to be handed in at the screws ' table , and they had to sign the property book .
14 It can be signed by anyone under 18 and will be handed in at 10 Downing Street , later this year .
15 I could be called in at any moment .
16 It can then be used in spare moments to provide you with recordings of matching background sound , which can be dubbed in at editing if need be to replace any unsatisfactory sections of the original synchronised sound .
17 It was the custom for various floats with tableaux to be wheeled in at midnight , and on this occasion , in an attempt to prevent them from being broken up , the organisers employed large numbers of rugger blues , dressed in white flannels and T-shirts , to act as stewards .
18 It 's also a good idea to have a spare machine readily to hand and regularly checked so that it can be wheeled in at a moment 's notice .
19 He should be brought in at the earliest stages to advise on venues — which would save time , money and frustration .
20 Mains electricity was supposedly going to be brought in at some stage , but God only knew when that would be .
21 The incentive aspect may be brought in at this stage to define a reward for the contractor for finishing on or before the contract completion date and compensation to the customer for finishing late .
22 FOLLOWING the successful introduction of dispenser units for BNFL News at risley site last month , changes to our distribution system are now to be brought in at chapelcross .
23 Work in progress may be agreed to be brought in at less than its face value to reflect expenses incurred during the period between bill delivery and payment .
24 The 50-cent man is restricted to using the knife on the most delicate parts of the hide ( floorman ) or to using the ax in splitting the backbone ( splitter ) ; and wherever a less-skilled man can be slipped in at 18 cents , 18½ cents , 20 cents , 21 cents , 22½ cents , 24 cents , 25 cents , and so on , a place is made for him , and an occupation mapped out .
25 The network topology is such that new file-servers can be plugged in at any time should the need arise .
26 Many of the plants can be put in at any time of year , except for the dahlias .
27 The diaphragm and spermicide can be put in at any convenient time up to three hours before making love so it need n't interfere at all with intercourse .
28 The depth of the hole at any moment represents the money that has to be put in at that moment .
29 The curve is not cumulative : the depth at each point indicates the money that has to be put in at that point .
30 1.3 However , RSC Ord 38 and CCR Ord 20 are expressed to be subject to the Civil Evidence Act 1968 ( see Appendix B ) under which hearsay evidence in documents can be put in at trial if a party can not call the witness .
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