Example sentences of "[noun pl] have [verb] in [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | According to CUP , the trade in the UK and Ireland has been ‘ magnificently supportive ’ , with almost 200 window displays of the Oxford Cambridge Book Race design , and entries have flooded in for the competition to win a holiday in Pompeii . |
2 | Resident outside the airfield 's motel for nearly 30 years , it was beginning to look very much the worse for wear and , as other Ouragons have given in to the ravages of time , attract the nearest of museums . |
3 | What 's happened is , of course , that as the costs have fallen and the micros have come in through the door so they 're very much smaller , erm it all becomes possible for the whole of society and not for a tiny elite . |
4 | At the capitalization party a number of well-wishers had wandered in from the various Labour movement campaigns and organizations which shared the Caxton House office block with NoS . |
5 | OVER the past two years , Swedish investors have come in from the cold . |
6 | Much later it struck me as odd that I experienced no superstitious fear or repugnance in the presence of a dead body , although I am so squeamish that more than once I have had to ask a neighbour to deal with a dead rabbit that one of the cats had brought in during the night . |
7 | The aim of this was to ensure that America would become a permanent arms economy in which the state would underwrite American corporations through their guarantee of demand for the high technology goods which these corporations had invested in during the war . |
8 | Then he went on to warn us that , during the cold snap earlier in the year , ice floes had swept in from the sea dragging buoys from their moorings . |
9 | A major supermarket has just unveiled four new Teenage Mutant Hero Turtle pizzas and Dr Mumby says the way the foodmakers have jumped in on the Turtle band-wagon is wrong . |
10 | On that basis , the CAP has not protected the small farmer because large , efficient farms have cashed in on the guaranteed payment scheme and produced huge quantities of food , using increasingly intensive methods . |
11 | But , in such a statement , the fact that were sides has crept in round the back . |
12 | I kept just killing time until it had gone eleven o'clock and all the cinema-goers had gone in for the late shows , at which point I decided to call it a day . |
13 | Wainfleet added that although the police had closed in on the area they had missed Sniffy . |
14 | For example , he was working out the exposition of the melodic cells which are the basis of most of the movement , so that his use of contradicting notes had to fit in with the melodic intervals , which were probably his primary concern . |
15 | An endless stream of proposals had poured in for the £20 million a year it had to dispense . |
16 | ‘ I do n't know , ’ Ellie denied numbly as she recognised the note Gramps had put in with the package to Mrs McMahon . |
17 | Leaden clouds had rolled in with the setting sun and as they neared Carvoeiro fat drops of rain began to splash on to the windscreen . |
18 | And during the day speckled shower clouds have moved in from the west . |
19 | The ‘ front ’ warned for our area by the weathermen is still some kilometres away so , although high clouds have spread in from the west already , only a few little ‘ cats ’ paws ' of wind ruffle the sea surface . |
20 | The undertakers have moved in as the middle-men , the ‘ third party ’ , who handle all the unpleasantness and worrying details of death . |
21 | BOSSES have cashed in on the Euro money crisis . |