Example sentences of "[adv] [v-ing] [verb] in [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ Not if some big flatfoot is just going to barge in on her and say I 'm shouting it all over town I was with her last night . ’ |
2 | Then everyone will think I 'm some kind of spy anyway because it 's hardly going to fit in with my cover of being a moron . |
3 | ‘ Ultimately , the customer is always going to call in through one particular vendor , but the hope of the alliance is that the vendors will work on a quid pro quo basis , ’ he added . |
4 | Many years before he had described , as we have seen the acute but generalized sense of apprehension which invaded him at times of stress or exhaustion and one recognizes in his temperament a permanent sense of impending doom and disaster — as if the world were always threatening to fall in upon him . |
5 | So , chopped frets meet slapdash rhythms and get on famously , wisely deciding to move in with singer Chris Waterman 's big , gold-white guitar and 24-going-on-14 cherubic looks . |
6 | Another British bank , the National Westminster , is also planning to cash in on science and technology . |
7 | His mother said her son was n't an addict , but was simply trying to keep in with his friends . |
8 | Anyone else wanting to cash in on the end of the Cold War is advised to get a move on — there 's already been considerable interest in the Wroughton air yard and the agents expect to sell it by the autumn . |
9 | I 'm actually going to go in for it in the Telegraph 's competition , so I may as well use the same team for our one if it gets going . |