Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] in [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Use it at 1½–2 ounces ( 43–57g ) per square yard ( square metre ) in spring and summer , hoed or dug in to the soil .
2 He appealed for members to comment by ringing Brenda on Middlesbrough 244860 or calling in at the club .
3 Dogs can easily leap over it or get in through the hedge on the south side .
4 But experience shows that language — and , particularly , language adopted or concurred in under the pressure of a tight Parliamentary timetable — is not always a reliable vehicle for the complete or accurate translation of legislative intention ; and I have been persuaded , for the reasons so cogently deployed in the speech of my noble and learned friend , that the circumstances of this case demonstrate that there is both the room and the necessity for a limited relaxation of the previously well-settled rule which excludes reference to Parliamentary history as an aid to statutory construction .
5 Try to plan to seat at least six comfortably , and also have some really occasional chairs that can be stashed away in a cupboard somewhere or brought in from the hall or a bedroom .
6 The frames can be painted , papered or covered in with the walls or painted a contrasting colour or white .
7 It also allows the diarrhoetic person no time for listening or taking in from the other .
8 Pottering down to the library to exchange Colin Thubron for Jonathan Raban or dropping in to the Jacaranda Tree for a mushroom omelette , everything can seem orderly and secure .
9 If you can help please telephone DAD on Darlington or call in at the local office at the Friends Meeting House , 6 Skinnergate , Darlington .
10 Individual difficulties would be singled out for special treatment : ‘ When a passage went wrong during practice , she did n't mentally beat herself with a stick and get angry , merely went over it again , maybe more slowly or homed in on the particular difficulty that had tripped her up and worked on that . ’
11 ‘ Like being murdered or taken in by the police , ’ said Rose , getting out of the car .
12 Becoming a member and shareholder on an issue by a private company ( or a closely-held public company whose shares are not listed or dealt in on the U.S.M. ) is subject to the same legal requirements of agreement plus entry on the register but in practice both will be achieved with less formality and , in the case of private companies , without the issue of allotment letters .
13 SI 1992 No 274 provides a complementary exemption , permitting companies which have ‘ relevant securities ’ traded or dealt in on the markets indicated above to issue investment advertisements provided that , in broad terms , they do not overtly advertise the company 's securities as investments or seek to advertise any other investments or investment services .
14 It was better to stand out at the beginning than to go in with the expectation that he would soon have to provoke a further crisis by resignation .
15 A window that turns in upon the pane ,
16 For now , 16 years later , and with two children aged seven and nine , she is running , from her Croydon home , a thriving sole practice that fits in with the demands of a young family .
17 It is also experimenting with a hybrid telemarketing scheme called WinCentralDirect that fits in with the company 's plug-and-play attempt and puts customers in contact with NT-certified technical and business consultants .
18 It is also experimenting with a hybrid telemarketing scheme called WinCentralDirect that fits in with the company 's plug-and-play attempt and puts customers in contact with NT-certified technical and business consultants .
19 The Open University offers you a lifelong opportunity to continue your education — to whatever level you want , and in a way that fits in with the rest of your life .
20 You need to structure it in a way that fits in with the argument that you 're go the line of argument you 're going to be putting before the magistrate .
21 When we run the satellite sequence , you can see all the cloud that moved in from the west overnight and the good news is that the back edge is not too far away .
22 Insects that fly in at the sides encounter a vertical baffle of netting that divides the trap along its axis , and tend to fly or clamber to the highest point of the baffle where the only way out is into a collecting jar .
23 An animal capable of symbolization can carry away from a situation an inner trace that stands in for the response it may make when it next encounters the situation .
24 The chill of the early morning was dispersing under the grey cloud base that spread in from the west .
25 Dr Tariq , frail and looking as though the gentle zephyr that came in off the Tigris might flatten him , could muster a savage temper when attacked .
26 And you the wee envelopes that came in with the black edging on them .
27 Film credits include Zeffirelli 's Jesus of Nazareth , with Robert Powell , Rod Steiger and James Mason , The Spy that Came in from the Cold , with Richard Burton , and Raise the Titanic , with Alec Guiness .
28 The cry that came in from the cold
29 They were used to store the very large volume of offerings and tribute that came in from the townspeople and from the people living in the surrounding countryside ; administrating the inflow and redistribution of this temple tribute was a major function of the Minoan temple .
30 It 's an exciting opportunity to see a country that came in from the cold — just do n't expect 130mph plus autobahns !
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