Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [verb] [adv prt] in the " in BNC.

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1 So that 's how you look after your bandages and all these things that we 're going to show you you 'll find in those little sections in your first aid book so if you get confused or why you 've only got to look up in the book .
2 Of course now it 's warm enough to start getting out in the garden , what could be better than to take a selection of water toys to play with in the paddling pool outside ?
3 If anyone thinks my language exaggerated or highly coloured — and such there might well be , considering that no one here under pensionable age can have any recollection of a world without rent restriction or subsidised rents — let him recall another upas tree which we only managed to cut down in the nick of time ten years ago .
4 The kettle sang quite quickly and meanwhile the stove , never entirely allowed to go out in the winter , had coughed into life .
5 The famous $18,000m black hole that Gartner Group so memorably spotted opening up in the heart of IBM 's business will suck the entire company into oblivion if it does n't embark on a crash programme to save the AS/400 .
6 Patrick Swayze is a doc with oedipal jitters who goes to India to find himself , only to get caught up in the struggles of the native people earning a crust on the heaving streets of Calcutta .
7 So it should be assumed that a similar number of those who changed in the ‘ right ’ direction were similarly ill-informed about their new choice , and just happened to end up in the ‘ right ’ group by chance .
8 Cricket was just beginning to take off in the mid-19th century .
9 As we saw in section 2.5 , the sectoral spatial division of labour was already beginning to break down in the UK during the post-war years when Fordism is supposed to have been at its height .
10 But it became clear that she would soon have to go out in the rain and get a bus to their sister convent .
11 But I felt guilty about her being in a Home … she just had to go in in the end — and I know it 's the best place , it 's safe and she has company all the time … ’
12 I did n't twig at the time but really she just wanted to hang out in the shop and she was coming up with any old excuse she could find to be in there .
13 When that final whistle went I just wanted to throw up in the sponge bag .
14 My dad , who , as I have already told you , was a docker by trade , never seemed to take that much interest in any of us and though he could sometimes earn as much as a pound a week , the money always seemed to end up in the Black Bull , where it was spent on pint after pint of ale , and gambled away on games of cribbage or dominoes in the company of our next-door neighbour , Bert Shorrocks , a man who never seemed to speak , just grunt .
15 Ticking off another tower is known as ‘ tower grabbing , and you always seem to end up in the pub afterwards ’ .
16 oh yeah they usually manage to come back in the end
17 Or the black Broadway actor who always fears ending up in the gutter .
18 ‘ I always do walk out in the end .
19 We usually have to queue up in the rain because Mr Barnes — our ‘ Supa-Tuta ’ — keeps the door locked until his arrival , to prevent vandalism ( although there are those who think that a spot of creative vandalism would smarten the place up a bit ! ) .
20 Where we 'll , where we 'll most probably get knocked out in the first round right .
21 They had both planned to stop on in the Sixth , then at the last moment , half way through the summer holidays in fact , Sheila had announced she was getting a job .
22 Such references also tended to crop up in the earlier discussion of attitudes to particular tasks : this comment of Jean Bevan 's is representative :
23 So Batty really has gone up in the world — from 4–3 against the ( old , great ) Liverpool at Elland Road two years ago to a 4–3 thriller against a club ninth in the fourth division .
24 ‘ Huh , ’ said Angalo , nonchalantly trying to swivel around in the chair in case any tentacled things with teeth were trying to creep up on him .
25 So that would be the argument against other schools even attempting to opt out in the Oxfordshire area ?
26 For his own part , the prince would cheerfully have bedded down in the cramped military quarters he normally used on his periodical visits , but he was punctilious in providing every amenity for his guests , and the greater space and grace of the abbot 's apartments made approach to his own person easier , and brought more petitioners in search of his favour , which at once satisfied his thirsty sense of duty , and wore him out into childish sleepiness by nightfall .
27 They too get caught up in the underworld of youth subcultures , where the peer groups become more important ( and possibly more caring ) than the family .
28 It is a remote and inaccessible area and he would never have gone off in the dark .
29 My brother and I used to have a joke — we saw how hard our father worked — that we would only consider medicine if we could become specialists in venereal diseases , because we would never have to get up in the middle of the night and we would never be out of work .
30 Eleven tricks made for a very good score , as several other declarers had actually contrived to go off in the same contract .
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