Example sentences of "[noun pl] coming in [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 This index was started by Herbarium staff , who scanned new journals and books coming in to the Library .
2 Since the 1920's Berlin has been a city encountered through images : Doblin , Pabst and Isherwood ; the diabolic glamour of Nazism ; Year Zero ; the Airlift ; John Kennedy and spies coming in from the cold ; the generation of " 68 , the stylized desperation of the punk underground , and angels made corporeal .
3 A very simple picture , again , it 's er you could n't have anything much more simple than this , just two waves coming in onto the shingle beach and er you can almost hear the the the waves rushing u running across the shingle .
4 What happened in Liverpool when Liverpool were playing ho oh , Nottingham Forest , and what happened was is that there was extra fans coming in to the ground and the police let them in and then everyone just started to get squashed and all that .
5 And it 'll be a cool afternoon , temperatures around nine degrees celsius , that 's forty eight fahrenheit , with light winds coming in from the east .
6 He watched Maggie bump the tall girl with her hip , then add , ‘ There 's a gang of parched Arabs coming in from the desert ; see to them . ’
7 A single-glazed window has a ‘ cold zone ’ around it where you 'll get convection draughts ( as well as the draughts coming in through the gaps ) .
8 Well I can remember when I went Was in the water at the start , there was You could see a lot of boats coming in alongside the platform .
9 Corbett bowed respectfully and , pushing by the labourers and other villeins coming in from the fields to break their fasts , went out of the Galilee Gate , across the track and into the woods .
10 Perhaps they would go down to the harbour in the evening and watch the yachts coming in to the anchorage , and sit with other groups at the chairs and tables outside the Bell Inn .
11 A strong south-westerly wind ruins the swells coming in off the Atlantic .
12 The changes in legislation have been dramatic since the mid-eighties the majority of changes coming in at the beginning of nineteen ninety three with the E C directives .
13 As one would expect , the majority of the sentenced prisoners coming in through the gates had received short terms , but 121 ( 13 per cent ) had been admitted to serve sentences over five years and 84 of these had received life imprisonment for murder .
14 A person of ‘ quality ’ — such as a member of the landed gentry or the clergy — would be at the top of their scale , commanding a funeral similar to that organized by the College of Arms for a knight bachelor , with paupers and wayfarers coming in at the bottom .
15 There are many more good illustrations coming in to the Library than there are analytical entries or other index terms .
16 Erm and we find in the office that we get lots of forms coming in from the Paymaster General asking us to confirm that mister X is employed you know on a on a part time basis .
17 I think it 's more difficult now to get that basis of status and confidence for new teachers coming in to the profession , it only because there are n't the promotions or the movement of new jobs .
18 I share John Main 's concerns , as reflected in MG Minutes of 7. ix.93 , over the volume and nature of public enquiries coming in to the Garden , because many of them are now being directed to the Library .
19 It appears to us all that there has been a significant drop in the numbers of telephone enquiries coming in to the Library since the new system went in .
20 On election nights members of the locality would collect in a state of great excitement to hear the results coming in on the station telegraph .
21 In addition to the students coming in through the normal channels , two non-uniform routes have emerged during the eighties .
22 There was always complaints coming in from the people who lived in the area about the gangs making a noise on the corner .
23 I have an army of women coming in from the village to do all that .
24 As transport costs rose and London 's reputation for violence after dark grew , business was increasingly dependent on coachloads of theatregoers coming in from the provinces .
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