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

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1 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 .
2 It also allows the diarrhoetic person no time for listening or taking in from the other .
3 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 .
4 The baby has gone past the sell-by date given by the hospital , but there is not a lot I can do except dig in on the front-line .
5 It was absorbed and went in to the Carrick Herald and the Aire Advertiser , and now they 've all gone .
6 Later this year a third intake will be built and linked in to the system which will automatically transfer raw materials to the mill .
7 But such a massive U-turn — Mr Major has always rejected a public vote — would be seen as giving in to the rebels .
8 The questionnaire on page 35 of this booklet should be completed and handed in at the Sport and Recreation Display on enrolment day or at the Sports ' Centre Reception .
9 The boy ran on to the flats where Zeinab lived and rushed in at the entrance .
10 One man was killed and another two people injured when a car overturned and smashed in to the front wall of a house .
11 The frames can be painted , papered or covered in with the walls or painted a contrasting colour or white .
12 Then she sighed and squeezed in by the side of the chest of drawers to look out of the window , scratching away with her finger nail at the film of grease on the pane .
13 Just then Uncle Alfred and Sylvia Swan arrived and peeped in through the gate at the happy crowd .
14 The chief academic and administrative officer of a Scottish university , he or she is usually styled ‘ principal and vice chancellor ’ , the latter title used when standing in for the chancellor on ceremonial occasions .
15 Use it at 1½–2 ounces ( 43–57g ) per square yard ( square metre ) in spring and summer , hoed or dug in to the soil .
16 He felt another little thrill as the car slowed and pulled in towards the kerb .
17 In some respects Kerrier may have constituted an exception , yet although the mean of £4.4 per head may need scaling down to take account of the multitude of labourers discovered and roped in for the subsidy , upwards of seven-tenths of the assessments made in 1522 were at £2 — £4 .
18 Any points similar to these which arise from any section of the application form/c.v. should be noted and taken in to the interview as a reminder .
19 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 .
20 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 .
21 It is thought to be exploring how insurance risks compare and fit in with the other financial risks it already manages routinely for customers .
22 So there I am , during this rather romantic conversation , toying with the little hairs in it 's ears , not knowing whether I should try and get in through the snout or what — but it had a happy ending .
23 A con man was arrested and brought in to the police station .
24 This required the ATB staff to have a good knowledge of the family situations of wives attending courses and to arrange course times that fitted in with the families ' needs and routines .
25 One was that some members of the public were unaware that they need not pay and gave in to the pressure of successive threatening letters .
26 Overnight , as passengers slept soundly in their cabins after a long day ashore , or the more hardy danced and gave in to the temptations of the midnight buffet , the Ocean Empress had weighed anchor and begun to move south again , until , shortly after dawn , the silence of the engines pronounced her arrival in Tenerife off the west coast of Africa .
27 He smiled and came in from the terrace .
28 The whole dinghy was jammed and sucked in under the stem , then rolled over , held fast by her steel mast which would not snap .
29 In the event of the name of a member nominated being on the official panel of available parliamentary candidates of an affiliated organisation the consent in writing of the Executive Committee thereof must also be obtained and sent in with the form of nomination .
30 Then , by watching and joining in with the children 's play , the balance of new and old can be altered as their interests change , without having everything in the water at once .
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