Example sentences of "[noun] [noun sg] [vb -s] in [prep] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | At this point , a side glen comes in on the right with a path leading to the dominating heights of Carn Eige and Mam Sodhail , or from it the bealach between Tom a' Choinich and Toll Creagach may be reached and a fine view seen over Glen Cannich to the mountains of Glen Farrar . |
2 | of course , if the vacancy requirements fluctuate as well , as is the case with contractors , a kind of see-saw effect sets in with the recruitment team oscillating between periods of intense activity and chaos on the one hand , and having nothing to do on the other hand . |
3 | ICE CLIMBING COMES IN FROM THE COLD |
4 | The entry level 386SX with 2MB RAM comes in at a mere £499 . |
5 | pull it up , well they might leave it and just co disconnect it but they they 'd have to bring it in , I do n't it 'd be better I think if we had ours in the back because the , the telephone thing comes in from the back be better than having it in the , in the passage really . |
6 | A new exhibition dealing with the redevelopment of a community area begins in at the Cleveland Gallery , Victoria Road , Middlesbrough , tomorrow . |
7 | One August evening I was fishing the Tweed at Manor , downstream from where Manor Water bustles in from the south to meet the ‘ Queen ’ of Scottish rivers . |
8 | We found that the wound margin moves in at a steady rate of 10–15μm per hour , and the wound is closed within 18 to 24 hours . |
9 | But more important is a feeling that the sky burial fits in with the isolation and strangeness of the setting . |
10 | Scale length checks in at the Fender-like 25½″ . |
11 | The grinning face of the fairground boy leers in through the wire . |
12 | LIVERPOOL 'S Irish Sea trade has been strengthened as the port 's Coastal Container Line links in to the most modern container terminal in Britain . |