Entering in a sentence as a noun

We're simply people, who program, and we are happy that other people are entering the field.

I worked at a company where our web site was copied by a competitor entering the same domain.

When entering the country, the passport clerk has exactly two options: let me in, or call the police and get me arrested on the spot.

After entering in that term I would be given a page of everything only titled 'iPod,' and could pick them up for $50-100 and **** them the next day for $250-300.

If entering the USA separately on such trips, she usually gets the third degree: "why aren't you travelling with your husband?

Before entering it, Elon will turn around and tell us he has done his duty and given us many gifts, and now we must use those gifts to advance mankind.

There were also issues of AT&T being forbidden from entering some aspects of computer business by a 1950s antitrust consent decree.

* Do the programmers entering the country require additional training as compared to local programmers?

* Are the programmers entering the country located in similar geographical areas to the programmers that are local?

I will make secure firewalls, safe and unattackable, which, entering among the hackers with their utilities, there is no body of crackers so great but they would break them.

If this is the case, then it may be conceivable that existing programmers and programmers entering the country would both benefit as the growing industry has room for them both.

Should I not bother?-When walking leaving my office and entering the hallway, how close should a person be entering the hallway from the opposite direction be before I wave or say hello.

"The problem is actually not so obvious:* Are the programmers entering the country working in the same exact fields and at the same levels of expertise as the programmers that are local?

Could you ever imagine a local retailer in your area breaking and entering into your home, taking away all your books, and then not giving you a straightforward explanation as to why they did so?

Everything about this story, right down to the questions, agents involved, luggage inspections and the man's apartment being broken into and searched, fits very well with my own experiences in 2012 with entering the United States.

Entering definitions

noun

a movement into or inward

See also: entrance

noun

the act of entering; "she made a grand entrance"

See also: entrance entry ingress incoming