Example sentences of "[det] [noun] [verb] in [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | A little money came in from The Character of Completeness , and he took Dinah out for supper in an hotel one Sunday , when she was not working . |
2 | Mr Grey 's enthusiasm and energy for the entrepreneurial challenge was contagious , but one could nevertheless feel a good few heels digging in among the bookselling purists at the idea of running a hairdresser . |
3 | Should be a few goals going in at the Baseball Ground on Sunday … the central live match is Derby County against Oxford United … |
4 | This exercise ties in with the " Retaining The Angle " exercises and also helps to develop the left Latissimus Dorsi , Trapezius and Triceps muscles , which are responsible for starting the downswing . |
5 | This refusal to fit in with the system continued when he returned to London , having jumped ship after a series of incidents — chopping down the house of someone 's aunt ; being technical supervisor on a failed bank robbery — had made him somewhat too conspicuous to the New Zealand authorities . |
6 | In addition to filling the significant gap which has arisen because this group falls in between the usual area specializations ( Turkish/Anatolian and Caucasian ) the project will also contribute to several fields of current debate within economic anthropology and ethnic studies . |
7 | However some water got in at the front . |
8 | This argument fits in with the pluralist notion of power that we discussed at the beginning of the chapter . |
9 | So I do n't think there will be a big national impact , it 'll just be the last few people coming in at the tail end . |
10 | J. Chapman , Sledmere Drive , Acklam , Middlesbrough : I was a final year pharmacy student in Sunderland and I was setting up apparatus for a chemistry experiment , when another student came in with the sad news that the King had died . |
11 | The way in which this subject fits in with the course in Typography & Graphic Communication as a whole is briefly described . |
12 | The furniture was clearly old , and had been chosen with some care to fit in with the atmosphere of the hall . |
13 | Ponds and lakes , too , benefit from their surroundings , as leaves and insects perish within them , and some nutrients run in from the surrounding land . |
14 | Allen asked , and as though to point his question they came to a place where another track came in from the right . |
15 | Another set pitched in from the north of the village , another from the south . |
16 | Ultimately just another conquest to lump in with the rest , so your score-sheet could remain unblemished by failure . ’ |
17 | Do the postures continuously , in graceful slow motion with each exercise leading in to the next . |
18 | But i it grew slowly over the weeks and I think Christmas was an example of just the actual logistics of what we did at Christmas must be something of a feat in that so much stuff came in from the volume of presents and then the way in which they could be distributed . |
19 | What I find though , erm , becau my , because we got so much stuff coming in for the shop anyway , like the lettuce or the fruit and veg , my parents don , you know , like most people go , yo your mother probably goes , how many , how often does she make a shopping trip ? |
20 | These findings tie in with the regular spontaneous contractions which are observed in smooth muscle . |
21 | Dealers were expected to get these cards filled in at the same time as fulfilling their quotas of business , but nobody had time . |
22 | A former bus driver is staging an all night sit in outside the offices of a training organisation he claims forced him out of a job . |
23 | At the end of the Gulf War , many many people wrote in to the BBC saying , ‘ why are n't you keeping going ’ . |
24 | At the end of the Gulf War , many many people wrote in to the BBC saying , ‘ why are n't you keeping going ’ . |
25 | The key-fobs sent to each individual member and Group secretary during 1979 have been a great success with many people writing in to the office expressing their appreciation ; it is hoped to produce a further token during out 30th anniversary year . |
26 | Those with turpentine , for instance , flew southwards if they had been trained in a loft with the smell of that compound blowing in from the north , and northwards if they had learned to smell it from the south . |
27 | More voices join in on the radio circuit . |
28 | This is more cash paid in from the last three weeks actually . |
29 | Behind him , three more gipsies crowded in through the doorway . |
30 | A £1,000 computer , several orders of magnitude more powerful than machines which cost £3,000 even five years ago , has very little profit built in for the supplier . |