Example sentences of "[verb] [noun pl] [conj] [verb] [pron] in " in BNC.

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1 This year he could help Middlesex win trophies and establish himself in England 's Test side .
2 They will have sorted bricks and arranged them in neat piles ( sorting and setting ) .
3 In Avon , Dr Peter Fleming , or a member of his team , will visit the home within 24 hours with the General Practitioner to give an explanation , as best they can , as to what has happened , to explain the post-mortem findings , and to counsel parents and help them in any way they can .
4 It checks calls and recovers them in case of a failure and passes the information back to the initiating program .
5 It checks calls and recovers them in case of a failure and passes the information back to the initiating program .
6 People risked everything to help escapers and want nothing in return .
7 Well , life has changed since then , and people now have to be a little bit wary when they meet strangers or find themselves in unusual places or situations .
8 One intuitively powerful argument , for instance , is that since animals regularly face problems and solve them in sensible ways , they must have some intellectual grasp of the problem .
9 He pulled them both under the blanket , cradled her to him , crooned words that meant nothing in her ear , kissed new tears from her cheeks .
10 Back to nursing events are not new but are a valuable means of locating nurses and interesting them in current health issues .
11 However , attempts to reduce the proportion of voting rights as the size of holdings increased were doomed to failure since the requirement could be easily evaded by splitting holdings and vesting them in nominees .
12 This procedure computes the blackout and whiteout levels and stores them in the fields black , white of savedValues .
13 Function models are important because they enable us to separate tasks and approach them in an organized way .
14 , Flora Jane ( 1876–1947 ) , writer , was born in Juniper Hill , a hamlet in north-east Oxfordshire , 5 December 1876 , the eldest child in the family of four daughters and two sons of Albert Timms , a stonemason , originally from Buckingham , and his wife Emma , a nursemaid , daughter of John Dibber from Stoke Lyne , an ‘ eggler ’ , who took his pony and cart around local farms , collecting eggs and selling them in the market town .
15 In 1957 , by a coincidence , we both sorted letters and set them in order .
16 First , many patients in hospital have taken overdoses or injured themselves in the past .
17 It seems ludicrous that Scottish Back-Benchers do not even have the facility of a Select Committee on Scottish Affairs to which we could summon Ministers and ask them in detail about the problems that we face .
18 ‘ The native habit of tethering horses and hobbling them in the full glare of a torrid sun ( with a temperature of perhaps 120 degrees F. in the shade ) destroys the strongest constitution and often kills them out-right …
19 Foucault 's genealogy means that by asking a question , posing a problem , you set up a generality against which you constitute events and arrange them in a series .
20 I take messages and leave them in a dead letter box .
21 He stretched out his hand , took the girl 's unresisting fingers and kissed them in a way the most professional courtier would have envied .
22 It is , then , important to try to reconstruct monuments and understand them in their entirety .
23 ‘ I want to make shoes and sell them in large quantities and yet I would like them to be different , individual , and to achieve that , I require a designer . ’
24 Participants are invited to bring kites or make one in the on-site kite workshop .
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