Example sentences of "[noun] [adv] into the " in BNC.

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1 We went into Sheffield right into the city and went to a pub .
2 Not only is the snow cover likely to remain comfortable in the high resorts right into the start of May , but the lower the temperature , the safer the snow .
3 Bulbs that are too near the surface can make thick temporary roots ( contractile roots or ‘ droppers ’ ) which pull the bulb deeper into the soil .
4 We have assumed for simplicity that the public sector 's current spending of £5,000 million flows entirely into the industrial and commercial sector in return for goods and services .
5 The fighting continued , spreading off the great curve of the ramparts down into the buildings below .
6 Could we just turn it a bit perhaps into the side ?
7 So it shoots the notes down into the body better , and the whole instrument resonates .
8 Ten minutes deeper into the beige-carpeted maze brings me to nothing .
9 Grease and press the base down into the tin so that the snipped pieces fold up around the sides of the tin .
10 Before returning , a look down into the tremendous ravine of Ling Gill below the bridge will reveal a most impressive scene , the beck hurrying along a bouldery bed fringed by trees and cliffs on its way to join the Ribble ; several minor caves have been found and explored along its banks but the rough terrain is a deterrent to walkers who prefer to travel sedately .
11 She waited as the woman disappeared into one of the inner offices , moving to the window and taking a look down into the street .
12 A new scar ran from the line of his jaw down into the collar of his open tunic , and Jehan guessed that Artai had broken the law which forbade the ill-treatment of captives , and he frowned .
13 So intently watching himself he no longer saw Richard and he pushed a finger smeared with cold gel gently into the hole , then the cock pressed against the opening and pushed .
14 We let the grating fall back and throw the last branch down into the darkness ; it catches on the branches stuck near the top of the shaft .
15 The measures , known as CBI II , made permanent the legislation to allow certain products duty-free into the USA .
16 a little bit down into the .
17 Sabine unfastened the chain round her neck , and put the medallion gently into the Baronne 's hand .
18 The obvious fact that Event was not working , his instincts to protect his investment , but also the awakening of his latent enthusiasm for the business of running a magazine , all drew Branson deeper into the quicksand which Event became .
19 One day , after he had been having lessons for some time , his father was called away by the boss : there was a horse in the ditch : it had gone to sleep on the edge and had rolled upside down into the ditch and could n't get out .
20 Robin Belcher was paddling in Australian colours and he and partner Fraser dropped their K2 upside down into the water while relaunching from the moderately high jetty at Chertsey .
21 FURIOUS Howard Kendall stormed out of Loftus Road tight-lipped last night after a double sending-off which helped plunge his troubled side deeper into the relegation mire .
22 The man does n't say anything ; he pushes Andy down into the ferns , and gets a hand free and punches Andy in the face .
23 He followed the officer , stepping through the churned mud , towards the concrete steps down into the brigade post , and the presence of the Chairman of the Revolutionary Command Council .
24 Alternatively , subducted oceanic crust may be able to pull adjacent continental crust down into the asthenosphere .
25 And this development if allowed , without a link road , will generate an additional estimated four hundred cars daily into the town centre .
26 MACAULEY Culkin 's Kevin may be a dab hand with a booby trap but when it comes down to straightforward , grimy-faced scallywaggery , there are a couple of Irish lads in Into The West who could give him a run for his money .
27 McAllister bustled in her turn , made the tea and carried the silver tray through into the parlour , to find Dr Neil at the sideboard , looking grim , the whisky bottle in his hand .
28 One evening off a week he had insisted on , and on those evenings Mr or Mrs Crumwallis occasionally poked their noses through into the boarding annexe and yelled ‘ Shut up ’ through the riot proceeding there .
29 He looked with half-closed eyes eastward into the wind .
30 Once acid has entered the lower esophagus peristaltic waves initiated within the body of the oesophagus sweep the bolus away into the stomach , but may still leave a juxtamucosal acidic environment in the lower oesophagus .
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