Example sentences of "[adv prt] into [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | This could be serious if you had to make a side-slip to get down into field on an early flight . |
2 | Pushing him back down into bed , she stood up , looming over him like the shadows of a nightmare . |
3 | Face tucked down into beard , drawn in |
4 | Two arms caught her and drew her down into warmth and security as she continued to cry into the comfort of her husband 's chest . |
5 | It dropped back down into cover , a roding woodcock . |
6 | still does n't fit and that 's the thing yeah I mean all this morning was saying you have n't seen under fire , they do n't stop and look around if they get down into cover he said how they suppose to know who 's firing or not ? , you know . |
7 | Round the corner from the old jail , the Royal Hotel boasted a well inside the bar , the top covered by glass and the stone walls curving down into darkness and revealing a tiny gleam of water . |
8 | Loose pebbles slithered , bounced , rattled down into darkness and silence . |
9 | There was nothing more interesting to be seen than if this had been the entrance to a rabbit warren , nothing but a tunnel that led down into darkness . |
10 | The last few miles to Ealing were covered in a jerking crawl which took more than an hour , and daylight was breaking down into darkness as Alison gave directions through the maze of streets and parked cars away from the main shopping area . |
11 | But if man is vulnerable to impulses which send him spiralling down into darkness , that very vulnerability is the means by which he can existentially know the strength whereby it can be healed and stabilised . |
12 | The problem of air resistance could be broken down into shape and surface effects . |
13 | ‘ Each cost centre manager gets a detailed report , and the chief officer gets a summary broken down into cost centres . |
14 | ALTHOUGH it is bound to be a finite group , each of those I 've mentioned can be broken down into sub |
15 | At that point , she broke down into laughter ; low , wild laughter , that could be heard in the rooms above . |
16 | you 're going down into park |
17 | Thus Stephen Wright 's Meditations in Green ( 1983 ) precariously tries to hold together ( through thy discipline of Buddhist meditation , for instance ) a self which is breaking down into hallucination under the impact of the Vietnam War . |
18 | Rough cobbles teased her feet through the light soles of her shoes as she paused to stare down into basement antique shops and silver vaults , second-hand bookstores and small cosy cafés . |
19 | Time-scale for achieving objective broken down into component parts |
20 | For example , if a customer needs an altimeter , PAS can supply the complete article , but if a customer needs just part of the instrument , they are willing to break them down into component form to ensure that the customer gets just what he wants . |
21 | You have started with a high level concept and broken it down into component parts . |
22 | You have started with a high level concept and broken it down into component parts . |
23 | It reflects the society and the times we live in as well as having roots which go deep down into history . |
24 | These can be broken down into organisation of money , time and preparation . |
25 | ‘ The point is , ’ said Dyson , thumping the car down into second to slow up at the traffic lights , ‘ a journalist ought to be specializing by the time he 's forty . |
26 | Analysing how the firm works and breaking that down into work which demands your professional training and expertise and work which does not is more important , since it allows the firm to work out the computer applications it needs . |
27 | A comparable facies also extends down into North Africa . |
28 | The natural cycle by which organic wastes are returned to the soil and broken down into humus presupposes a balance between soil , plants , and animals . |
29 | British engineers have developed a new method of incinerating spent vehicle tyres at high temperatures , breaking them down into gas and oil for fuel , and " char " — a residue which is rich in high-quality carbon . |
30 | Miley Taylor of Deepdale , who was in the Home Guard at the time , went out with a horse-drawn sledge to bring the bodies of the crew , all French-Canadians , down into Dent . |