20 Verbs to Use for the Word ins

He knows the ins and outs of this business.

It takes a lifetime of study to understand all the ins and outs of postmarks.

* "'Seed potatoes' means potatoes grown in Scotland or Ireland in the year 1917, or grown in England or Wales in the year 1917 from seed grown in Scotland or Ireland in the year 1916, which will pass through a riddle having a 1-5/8-in.

You are but a boy, and must not fancy you know the ins and outs of the human heart.

I ain't jealous; he ain't got any particular stand-in with Florabut if I started action on him, that's what the general verdict would be.

"Coulter's got speed to burn," he said, "but I'll try to get hit if he gives me an in, even though it kills me.

Would anybody believe," continues M. Malouet, "that M. Necker had an idea of inventing a ground-slip, a falling-in of the cellars of the Menus, and of throwing down during the night the carpentry of the grand room, in order to remove and install the three orders separately?

The story is dull: by way of relief, I make a digression, very brief, And leave the "ins" to swallow their beef, The "outs" their mortification.

This rather personalised essay, obviously biased and clouded by a string of personal experiences, seeks to narrate one person's run-ins into Goa's most long-serving editor.

Sir George Grey refused to proclaim it, and succeeded in postponing the coming-in of free institutions for six years For many reasons he was probably right, if only because the Maoris still much outnumbered the Whites; yet under Earl Grey's proposed constitution they would have been entirely governed by the white minority.

The biographer, presenting all the ins and outs of her body and soul as he has, makes her live before us with a fresh vitality that is startling.

I will not stay for all this, ye shall know me A man born to a more beseeming fortune Than ringing all-in, to a rout of Dunces.

No doubt nothing is further from your mind than to convey such a suggestion, but you have a way of stressing the 'in' and then coming down with a thud on the 'deed' which makes it virtually tantamount to 'Oh, yeah?'

But I was all for commercial life; and when I left college, I went into an office here in the town and began to study the ins and outs of foreign trade.

It would be a long affair to tell you all the ins and outs, but I am sure from what has come to pass during the last few days, that we must get nearer Pekin before the Government there comes to its senses.

"If you want a good look-in, I can get through the ropes.

at the shoulders, bitches 20 ins.

The signaler caught the corporal before he withdrew his tap-in and implored him to search along and find the leakage.

By this time, the crew, under the orders of the pilot, were assembled at the windlass, and had commenced heaving-in upon the cable.

"Is it I pull you out of the grave, indeed!" continued the whipper-in, for such he was, "I'd let nobody pull your honour out of any place, saving 'twas purgatory; and out of that I'd pull you myself, if I saw you going there."

20 Verbs to Use for the Word  ins