Example sentences of "in [pron] [pron] [verb] to " in BNC.

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1 In one patient in whom there appeared to be delay in biliary drainage at endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography ( >30 minutes ) , an endoscopic sphincterotomy was performed .
2 For Assiter , fantasy is not just a harmless and essentially solitary activity in which everyone engages to a greater or lesser extent , but is something which also has an effect on the way people behave towards others , and on the way they may feel they can justifiably treat each other , particularly women .
3 Perhaps the key way to establish a connection between the concerns of conventional Marxist urban and regional sociology and the concepts outlined in Chapters 1 and 2 is to concentrate on typical forms of social mobility ; the ways in which they relate to spatial mobility and moral careers .
4 While a great deal depends upon reform efforts outside the prison system ( and indeed these efforts are often located outside the criminal justice process ) , prison personnel do not have to play the passive roles in which they tend to be cast .
5 Former military officer Gregorio " Gringo " Honasan and six other leaders of the dissident Rebolusyonaryong Alyansang Makabansa ( Nationalist Revolutionary Alliance ) signed an accord with the government on Dec. 23 in which they agreed to " suspend hostilities " .
6 And , further , ‘ the circumstances in which they came to be made were never reported by journalists . ’
7 We shall consider each of them in the chronological order in which they came to Anselm 's attention .
8 We have been able to explore , through what they told us , the many different ways in which they respond to this challenge .
9 Families of different kinds , for example those in which the mother does or does not work outside the home , are compared in terms of the ways in which they respond to the unpredictable , but inevitable , occurrence of these episodes of childhood illness .
10 After their arrest the three accused made police statements in which they admitted to having gone " wilding " on the night in question , a term meaning the perpetration of motiveless assaults .
11 Values and principles did not change , he said , but the times in which they had to be applied did change .
12 Bearing in mind that Labour Members have made many promises without costing them , will my hon. Friend tell us whether they have made promises about the environment in which they claim to be interested ?
13 One danger with this emphasis on the language of adults is that it easily leads to the conclusion that adults actually cause developmental progress by the way in which they speak to young children .
14 It was difficult to tell , in that atmosphere of absolute silence , of sacred respect in which they listened to me ’ ( Neruda : 1974 , p. 240 ) .
15 They accomplish this task by listening to papers delivered on them and by attending ‘ pray-ins ’ in which they pray to the Implied Reader .
16 So much of the music produced for keyboard and other polyphonic instruments throughout the 16th century was based on works originally written for the voice , and Marshall adeptly shows the colourful way in which they transfer to the Piffaro organ .
17 The commons presented a series of articles in which they objected to the levying of prises and insisted that ‘ no free man should be assessed or taxed without the common assent of parliament ’ .
18 The police referred daily to the current price of gold announced by Johnson Matthey and pitched the prices they offered appropriately to the form of dealing in which they purported to be engaged .
19 Here , we may claim , the clusters of imagery in the tale reach their fulfilment in a hilarious fabliau denouement , not in a climax in which they convert to solemn symbolic meanings in an implicit moral scheme .
20 To understand the myth of the golden age in the past , we therefore need to understand family relationships and family responsibilities in the present and the circumstances in which they have to be worked out : the topic with which the rest of this book is concerned .
21 And in so far as it , as the question arises erm of what kind of , of provisions erm are you going to find if you go abroad , erm then I think we can say that within the European Community , erm citizens of one member state are entitled to what the citizens of the member state in which they happen to be staying are entitled to .
22 I think that they are erm unfortunately erm affected by any event which happens in an area in which they happen to be .
23 Most of this housing took the form of Tyneside flats , an unusual type of construction in which what appears to be one reasonably large terrace house of a kind very commonly built in industrial cities in Northern England in the late nineteenth century , is in fact two flats .
24 In this sermon on prayer , I want us to think about prayer as a two-way conversation in which we talk to God and in which we listen to him as well .
25 It is this time-depth that will interest us in chapter 5 , in which we turn to evidence for vernacular variation in earlier English .
26 … having myself graduated in Business over 40 years ago , there seems to be a remarkable cycle in which we return to particular models every few decades .
27 We begin each section with a standard definition of Compacts in which we refer to the Training Agency explanation : " A Compact is founded on partnership and commitment .
28 While we were in Christchurch there was a ‘ Festival of Romance ’ , in which we went to several concerts , exhibitions and lectures , and on the final night the orchestra played a fireworks concert beside the lake in Hagley Park .
29 In which we had to be very responsible like wearing a life jacket and plimsolls so we did n't slip on the floor .
30 In this respect my position will amount to thinking that there are intrinsically prescriptive features to reality , but this will not be done by blurring the distinction between judgements about how the world is characterised and the ways in which we respond to it , as with McDowell .
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