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How to use take in in a sentence

Looking for sentences with "take in"? Here are some examples.

Sentence Examples
It will start at York's Millennium Bridge and take in a scenic route around the walkways.
Now she would be able to build a smaller house, take in roomers, and have more room for the plants which she loved so dearly.
The other way to take in the amazing variety of underwater sites that line the leeward side of Bonaire is by shore diving.
They have income from legacies or property sales, and they will take in a lot from collections.
A wild eagle owl can be as vicious as a lion cub, hardly the sort of creature you would take in as a pet.
Being Sunday, several families were on the Necklace Road to take in the classical rhapsodies.
Her eyes take in everything, limpid and deep, revealing a kind of rawness that's hard to read.
Road biking is not like running, where you have time to take in your environment.
We seem to be confronted in these films by the masochistic pleasure women take in their own self-sacrifice or renunciation.
Instead of staying cooped up in a hotel room on a mid-week business or pleasure trip to London, take in some of the city's top West End shows.
I was too wrapped up in my thoughts to take in the surroundings, and enjoy my freedom.
I swallowed hard, trying to take in the sight of my home in such a terrible mess.
Then a route was mapped out to take in as many different species and articles of interest as possible.
The look on their faces told its own story as they tried to take in the dreadful news of the tragedy that had befallen this community.
During a race, crews talk with drivers via radio and take in reams of telemetry from the car.
Following many old mountain tracks the walk will take in some brilliant scenery.
Just look at his managerial record and take in how far Sunderland have already come since he took charge.
Stripping off the costume the wardrobe mistresses had to take in about half a centimetre of the costume since Friday!
Technical analysis sees price as an all-important factor that tells the direction a security will take in the short term.
Is Google right to take in this information and repurpose it through Google News?
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Examples from Classical Literature
The cells are like the tiny animal, the ameba, and can take in the food by any part of their bodies.
Not the least of her joys was the pleasure that she knew Trevor would take in her success.
The first and second are informative, explicative, they take in and dothe other gives out.
She was so full of her own thoughts at that time, that she did not fairly take in the import of her words.
At last, one fine day Mr. howlet was seen to drive up to the Hall, and take in with him a large document.
It's something which will take in every manufactory of any importance in the country.
I wanted to take in the gaff-topsail also, but Bob would not hear of such a thing.
In the meantime the crew had come aft to take in the mainsail and gaff-topsail.
Thence they sailed by the north of Gilolo, stopping at bouton to take in provisions and water, till they reached Batavia.
Heard tell of gunfighters knotchin' their irons for each man they take in a shootout.
The mind seems soon to reach the saturation point where it is unable to take in any more.
From Carthagena we were sent down the coast to a little place called Aguilas, where we began to take in a cargo of barilla.
That rest which he would not give himself when his sensations prompted, he has now to take in long measure.
That rest which he would not give himself when his sensations prompted he has now to take in long measure.
Some day, maybe, your mind'll take in somer the things you're missin' now, and maybe it never will.
We were now standing away for the island Tenerife where I intended to take in some wine and brandy for my voyage.
It will, I fear, enfeeble the interest, which he might otherwise take in the result.
Here they would sell their furs, take in teas, nankeens, and other merchandise, and return to Boston, after an absence of two or three years.
The form that rabies take in rabbits may fairly be called painless.
It is thirteen hundred and ten miles from Suez to Aden, at the other end of the Red Sea, and she has to take in a fresh coal supply.
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