Example sentences of "[conj] [pron] [vb -s] them in " in BNC.
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1 | They then have to try and unravel it and , in so doing , will find that it takes them in all sorts of different places until at the end they find a small present . |
2 | What is most important , however , is that he embodies them in a distinction , crucially important for his thought , between two sorts of science : ‘ indefinite science ’ , which ‘ consists in the knowledge of the causes of all things ’ , and the study of some ‘ limited ’ question about the ‘ cause of some determined appearance ’ such as heat . |
3 | Though my son , that 's my eldest , in the Royal Navy , wrote that he has them in the Pacific . ’ |
4 | I try not to though , I mean that 's her responsibility , I buy the plants and she puts them in the garden , er in the . |
5 | erm And he describes them in these terms because of course this is how he sees them from different angles while rounding a series of bends on the road , so that in fact he describes the movement which his senses perceive , not the solid immobility to which his intellect testifies . |
6 | ‘ I 've brought you your biscuits , ’ he says , and he puts them in my hand . |
7 | And he grows them in wind tunnels . |
8 | If you want children now , and he wants them in five years , or you want two and he wants six , you can probably reach a compromise . |
9 | I have no quarrel with that , provided he sets them in that order . |
10 | ‘ Where goods are sold in market overt , according to the usage of the market , the buyer acquires a good title to the goods , provided he buys them in good faith and without notice of any defect or want of title on the part of the seller . ’ |
11 | ‘ Where the seller of goods has a voidable title to them , but his title has not been avoided at the time of the sale , the buyer acquires a good title to the goods , provided he buys them in good faith and without notice of the seller 's defect of title . ’ |
12 | He knows that if he helps them in time of need , they will reciprocate without being asked . |
13 | They are comfortably familiar tunes , but she interprets them in an intensely personal way . |
14 | This does not , like a divorce , enable the parties to marry again , but it releases them in other respects from the duties of married life . |
15 | This period — the most glittering episode of the golden years — illustrates the fundamental dynamics of the boom particularly well because it shows them in operation in top gear and with enormous effect . |
16 | Yet , no matter how far one travels I doubt if one ever really gets to know people , or places , not as one imagines them in one 's mind . |
17 | When he slides them in front of us you can feel the heat rising . |
18 | He distinguishes among them , cursorily , as he cites them in order . |
19 | But to his unfortunate son and daughter ( William Armstrong and Margo Gunn ) he seems to ‘ make Shylock look like Dr. Barnardo ’ as he keeps them in penury with each request for money causing him acute physical pain . |
20 | That even as he gets them in his grip |
21 | Nor did Berlioz , though he mentions them in his book and predicts an unforeseen future for them ! |