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This article appears to be poorly written with not much info (there should be a list of episodes in the one season on this page). There are also no refrences in this article and this has been tagged as a stub. By the look of things, I don't think it is that notable to have a seperate article. If no improvement is made in the next four days I will tag it for deletion. trainfan01 20:06, July 15, 2010 (UTC)
"Paddington Clocks in" Is "in" correct? I do not know abot this subject 2 know although I did Google search.Srednaus Lenoroc (talk) 11:35, 9 February 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Srednaus Lenoroc, I'm not sure what specifically your question is, so I'll cover all the things I think it could be:
"Clocks in" is an expression used when describing (broadly) the use of a time clock, typically at a job. When you start a shift and activate the time clock, you "punch in" or "clock in".
This YouTube video shows a title card of "Paddington Clocks In", so it seems a valid title.
If you're asking whether or not the In should be capitalized, yes, because although we don't typically capitalize short prepositions in a composition title, if they begin or end the title, we do. Please see MOS:CT. I have fixed that here.