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38 Sentences With "raking it in"

How to use raking it in in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "raking it in" and check conjugation/comparative form for "raking it in". Mastering all the usages of "raking it in" from sentence examples published by news publications.

It helps that firms have been raking it in, too.
That guy is still raking it in from you halfwits.
The park isn't the only business raking it in during April's pregnancy.
Every time the 'dun dun' sounds, Emmy winning Post is raking it in.
Look no further for proof that the U.S. airline industry is raking it in.
Media magnate Oprah Winfrey is raking it in on her stake in Weight Watchers.
So the airlines make a bit less money — they are already raking it in.
Despite the damaging consequences, the sand mafia will continue raking it in for a while.
But then somebody pays them a lot of money to give speeches, so they are raking it in.
When you look at everything she's done, indeed outside music, it's no surprise Mail Online reckons she's raking it in.
But the workers say they're being asked to make sacrifices at a time when their industry is raking it in.
And once a "William Swenson" site started raking it in, the company's filters would flag the account and shut it down.
In other words, it is not obvious that CEOs in America and Britain are raking it in because they are uniquely skilled.
So, yes, we can come up with all sort of theories why Apple is not raking it in as it used to.
Not to mention the Harpursville, New York-based Animal Adventure Park, which is closed for its off-season, has been raking it in.
Influence is the name of the game, and travel bloggers — with their high follower counts and multi-platform appeal — are raking it in.
Indian fans follow a film's box office numbers nearly as avidly as cricket scores, and Veere Di Wedding appears to be raking it in.
Apple has been raking it in with this whole "iPhone" thing, so they've got some spare change to drop on a shiny new campus.
The real news isn't the NX or the slow decline of Nintendo's profits (the company hasn't been raking it in since the original Wii).
The 2-year-old twins who play Tommy on "Fuller House" got cribs full o' cash ... because both boys are raking it in every episode.
Yet media firms are still raking it in, because ad rates have gone up, and the price of cable TV continues to rise every year.
"Packers are just raking it in, so the incentive is there to ramp up the kills," said Tim Hackbarth, analyst with Top Third Ag Marketing in Chicago.
They made way, way, way less money doing that than if they were bundling big MBS' and raking it in by the tens or hundreds of millions.
The past year has been a brutal one for clothing companies struggling with slumping sales, bankruptcies, and layoffs, but one company has been raking it in — and no, it's not Amazon.
Then there's the increasing number of freelancers joining the UK's self-employed workforce—which sits at just shy of five million people—explaining why companies like WeWork are raking it in.
While the rest of the Team USA Olympians were yukking it up with President Obama at the White House Thursday, Ryan Lochte was raking it in ... shooting a commercial with his new sponsor.
And rank-and-file employees, who may have spent years building the business from scratch when they could have been raking it in at a more established organization, can be left in the dust.
The Hill's Lisa Hagen dug into the latest fundraising numbers and found Democratic House candidates raking it in by the millions – astonishing figures that are on par with fundraising numbers for some Senate candidates.
While she may not be cooking up new singles in the studio, Spears is raking it in with a Las Vegas residency, as well as touring when she's not serving up the hits in Sin City.
"That shift where you're raking it in, when combined with other shifts where you're struggling to make it, mean that you have irregular and unpredictable earnings," said Heidi Shierholz, senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute.
Mr. Chaffetz, the committee chairman, questioned Ms. Retzlaff's assertion that Turing, a one-year-old company, was losing money, saying the company was "raking it in hand over fist," and had been planning another price increase for Daraprim.
There are quite a few people in China who are losing a lot of money right now, all thanks to disruptions caused by the protests, and they're probably not going to give up until they're raking it in again.
The Yang money machine rolls on: Even as better-known candidates -- including a slew of elected officials -- continue to struggle to raise the money they need to run effective campaigns in early states, technologist Andrew Yang just keeps raking it in.
Until then, Pennywise has been keeping busy by popping up in other unexpected places: In addition to raking it in at the box office with $650 million in ticket sales worldwide, the newly minted superstar has been headlining sexual fantasies and dancing to Taylor Swift hits.
As he was raking it in, he invested in his own film outfit, Jela Productions, and began producing his own movies.
Reviewing the album in Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies, Robert Christgau wrote: > After twenty years of raking it in from the shadows, he's finally figured > out a way of applying his basically comic bass/baritone to rock and roll. > Studio-psychedelic New Orleans, echoes of the Band and Dr. John, some > brilliant minor r&b; mixed in with the dumb stuff. My God—at the moment he's > more interesting than Tina.
" Turner himself said of his tremolo technique: "I thought it was to make the guitar scream—people got so excited when I used that thing." Dave Rubin wrote in Premier Guitar magazine: "All those years of playing piano and arranging taught him a considerable amount about harmony, as he could certainly navigate I-IV-V chord changes. Ike modestly terms what he does on the guitar as 'tricks', but make no mistake, he attacked his axe with the conviction of a man who knew precisely what he wanted to hear come out of it." Reviewing Turner's Bad Dreams (1973) LP in Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies (1981), Robert Christgau wrote: "After twenty years of raking it in from the shadows, he's finally figured out a way of applying his basically comic bass/baritone to rock and roll.
After a few fiery speeches on the floor, he quickly becomes a superstar, and then begins raking it in by doing testimonials on the House floor and selling product tie-ins featuring himself to his legions of fans. He even becomes a permanent member of the panel on a popular game show and, despite alienating the host and the other guests with his insult comedy, becomes a ratings success. His new-found fame backfires, however, as he learns that Sarah has sold her life story to a national tabloid, which plans to serialise the entire sordid story, exposing all of his darkest secrets. Racing to 10 Downing Street, he implores Margaret Thatcher to intervene and stop the publication, but she refuses, saying that she ordered Sarah to write the memoir to cut him down to size.

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