Example sentences of "in at [art] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | She pulled in at a motorway service station and decided on lunch . |
2 | Erm , what happened was the cathedral council one light in at a cost of four hundred and fifty pounds but they could n't afford the second light , so we got some money from erm the residents who contributed some money , we got some money from the school and there was a shortfall of sixty six pounds thirty one pence for the total bill , so the chairman er . |
3 | We 're early , so we call in at a pub . |
4 | The longest came from his great rival , William Ewart Gladstone — that clocked in at a mind-numbing four hours and 45 minutes . |
5 | Apparently I had windmilled in at a quarter to ten , with three bottles of champagne , all of which I dropped in one catastrophic juggle . |
6 | An elderly female novelist had come in at a quarter to six and Penelope had found herself trying to explain why her latest novel had not been reviewed in the Sunday Telegraph , why it had not been advertised more widely , why copies had not been displayed on the bookstall of a friend 's local station , why it had not yet been reprinted . |
7 | They went down an alleyway and in at a door . |
8 | The lean hand gripping his arm thrust him in at a door in the long encrustation of buildings that clung to the curtain wall on the sunny side , where the best light fell and the day lingered longest . |
9 | Frédéric peers in at a window . |
10 | We look in at a window . |
11 | I called in at a Sainsbury 's to buy some essential items . |
12 | Nazarbayev was sworn in at a session of the republican Supreme Soviet on Dec. 10 , at which the republic dropped the words " soviet socialist " from its title to become the Republic of Kazakhstan . |
13 | A GREY parrot had detectives baffled last night when it was handed in at a Liverpool police station . |
14 | Alice looked in at a scene of comfort . |
15 | After leaving the letter in a drawer she had gone to a nearby town and booked in at a hotel . |
16 | Having booked herself in at a hotel where she was well known , she returned to the hospital and sat with her daughter throughout most of the evening . |
17 | ‘ I thought it was worth a try , so I drove up here , booked myself in at a hotel down the road . |
18 | Wycliffe was booked in at a hotel on the waterfront , up river from the wharf and facing the village of Flushing across a narrow stretch of water . |
19 | WILLIAMS ) came in at a run from the " Coriolanus " matin e e , still in his toga , and just made his position in time . ] |
20 | Anyone finding them should hand them in at a police station or to any officer he said . |
21 | Call in at a Booking Agent . |
22 | Led by Lt Fusata Iida they flew in at a height of 50ft and within a few minutes the airfield was a smoking mess . |
23 | Four members of the press were allowed in at a time . |
24 | Paradoxically , ‘ people 's capitalism ’ has been ushered in at a time when the long-term trend towards a greater equality in wealth may have been reversed , and in a manner that has firmly excluded the poorest from acquiring capital assets themselves . |
25 | And they 'd let so many in at a time . |
26 | They 've seen language labs , which are great , more or less mould away for lack of resources to keep them in working order , and they see micros coming in at a time when everything else is being cut . |
27 | It was one of those cosmic accidents which are no accident , that the next day , when she called in at a bookshop to look for some more Morris titles , she should find on the same shelf the total output of Professor M. L. Vaughan ; and among the rest his : Aurae Phiala : A Pleasure City of the Second Century A.D. She took it down and opened it at random , and the prose caught her by its incandescent fervour . |
28 | The branch road from Dent joins in at a bridge and the hamlet of Cowgill , once a parish in its own right , is immediately beyond : here is a church built in 1873 , a converted school , the pleasant residence and gardens of Cowgill Grange and an isolated terrace of cottages . |
29 | It meets the River Lyon and the rivers pour in at a rate of 370 cubic metres a second . |
30 | For the first six months they have to live in at a training centre . |