0 If you have a run-in with someone, you have a serious argument with them or you get into trouble with them: --
1 an argument, disagreement, or fight: --
She’d had a run-in with the dog before.
He now moves another amendment which will make that run-in stage more prolonged.
Not only has it a railway station incorporated in the terminal, but it has a proper run-in off the road.
However, there is no long run-in, no recognition that the measure should apply only to those who can make alternative provision.
There would be a lower marginal rate for the lower incomes, and a smoother run-in, as he put it; it would give a smoother gradation.
That would be a poor and demoralising run-in for 1993.
I agree very much with some of the comments about having a long run-in period and encouraging voluntary schemes in the meantime.
Because of the long run-in, the decision must be made sooner rather than later.
I believe that we should give the new arrangements a fair and clear run-in.