Example sentences of "in [conj] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 I mean why did it cave in or whatever . ’
2 What we need to be certain about is that whatever society is involved in or whatever organisation is involved in balloting that it should be seen to be done properly .
3 Yeah , one of these things you sit in , put twenty P in or whatever it is , and have a ride for two minutes .
4 A system is that part of the world which we are interested in or which we are investigating .
5 In the end we just let the audience in or we 'd have been there all day . ’
6 Jean said there was about two hundred in or something .
7 You know he 's is n't he , has n't he got one of his own up in or something ?
8 It 's not what I believe in or what I can see and touch that 's the most important , it 's the unseen reality behind physical appearances … .
9 If someone believes that it is raining , or that the knave stole the tarts , there is either a state of affairs such as he believes in or there is not , and his belief , and the statement which expresses it , is true or false ; accordingly .
10 It is true that the Spanish-American novel has entered the mainstream of world literature in that it is informed by the major intellectual currents of our age , in that its exponents share the artistic and philosophical preoccupations of modern writers in general , and in that it has consciously sought and attained a universality that earlier Spanish-American fiction sometimes lacked .
11 The Court 's decision is based on the fact that RTE 's refusal to license was arbitrary , in that its sole rationale was to preserve RTE 's monopoly in the publication of weekly information about its programmes : the Court said there was no justification in terms of the specific needs of the broadcasting sector or the activity of publishing television magazines .
12 Its morale had recovered far too well , in that its officers and instructors were turning to a doctrine of offensive warfare at all costs .
13 A popular paper differed from this in that its large circulation ensured that newsprint and ink was its major cost category ( 36% ) , followed by production costs ( 30% ) and editorial costs ( 13% ) .
14 The Evangelical movement , despite its minority status , cast its influence far more widely than the actual numbers of its adherents might suggest ; it is of especial interest to students of child rearing attitudes , in that its followers were so prolific in their writings that their beliefs ( or watered-down versions of their beliefs ) dominated both the advisory literature available to parents and the children 's own reading matter for upwards of two centuries .
15 And Israel only knows that its " way is hidden from Yahweh " ( A ) in that its cause is ignored , it does not receive its rights ( B ) .
16 English Language , Literature , and History in the colleges was both similar to and different from these other modern disciplines ; similar in that , like them , it sought to create for itself a solid and autonomous identity ; different ( especially from the early decades of this century ) in that its predominantly classically-trained and often clerical academic proponents increasingly claimed for it a status well beyond that of any mere " discipline " or " knowledge subject " .
17 It was compatible also in that its procedures were much more closely aligned to historical scholarship than to critical evaluation , while at the same time enabling engagement in detailed analyses of literary language .
18 Such a social psychology would be intrinsically applied , in that its theories and key concepts would be applicable only to particular , historical contexts .
19 The County Court is an inferior court , in that its jurisdiction is limited .
20 The Quartet is distinct from most examples of this genre , however , in that its focus is firmly fixed on its own status within a world which is increasingly under the control of non-verbal forms of communication .
21 Its revolutionariness is , however , only incidentally political : in that it evolved outside the universities in marginal academic institutions , and in that its development during the 1960s reached a kind of peak in the years 1967 — 8 , thus coinciding with the événements of 1968 .
22 The University 's approach to financial planning ( as has been explained on previous occasions ) is essentially conservative , in that its systems are aimed at forecasting what funds will be available during the planning period and deciding how best to apply them to the academic priorities already identified .
23 It is worth observing , furthermore , that even a committed liberal humanist teacher like Barbara Hardy found that opportunities to teach " against the environment were rare ; perhaps particularly so in that her own college ( Birkbeck ) worked within the examination-dominated regime of the University of London .
24 I was lucky in that we were able to spend time away from Berlin .
25 We are at a disadvantage in Britain in that we do not have a revolutionary doctrine to preach : a vivid message that promises an unattainable millennium .
26 They believe that reality ‘ points beyond itself ’ in the sort of way that the pile of books points beyond itself , in that we know something must be holding it up or it would fall .
27 Much the same thing occurs in New Statesman & Society , but there is a significant shift here in that we begin to see cultural products ( or rather questions raised by them ) being discussed outside of the journal 's cultural space — in the editorials and in guest journalists ' comments .
28 In that we see Herbert 's more easy-going temperament .
29 Most of us in the western world are fortunate in that we know where the next meal is coming from .
30 We 're lucky , outsiders like me , in that we 've got the Franks Report on the origins of the war , which covers the seventeen-year build-up , the era of non-decision-taking almost , which led to the Argentine invasion of 1982 .
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