Example sentences of "[noun] have [verb] into " in BNC.
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1 | In Bharatpur , the competition between Rajiv Gandhi 's ruling Congress ( I ) party and the assorted forces of the anti-Congress opposition is so finely poised , and the pool of royal admirers so deep , that three prominent relatives of Maharajah Brijendra Singh have slipped into a democratic version of an old autocratic vice : the royal family feud . |
2 | Notoriously these words have crept into ordinary usage from medieval philosophical Latin . |
3 | SHELL forecourts have sailed into a ‘ discrimination ’ row over ferry crossings . |
4 | Although many pubs , shopping centres , garden centres and schools have stepped into the breach , their play areas ca n't really compare with a good adventure playground in the local park . |
5 | This new concern , among social thinkers of different persuasions , with the opportunities for peaceful change no doubt results in part from a revulsion against the extreme violence characterizing the first half of the twentieth century , and against the authoritarian political regimes which some kinds of violence have brought into existence , as well as from a deep-seated and pervasive apprehension of the ultimate consequences of violence in the age of nuclear weapons . |
6 | But at the same time it 's wonderful that the government is recognizing the kind of work that gay organizations have put into this issue . |
7 | Virtually none of the people looked at in this demonstration have gone into an informal care setting where they are relying to a large degree on informal caring . |
8 | Thousands of hours of work by Cheltenhams parks and gardens department have gone into creating the displays . |
9 | Computers have come into schools both at secondary level and primary level . |
10 | Millward Brown use their own proprietary system of analysis — a form of mathematical modelling — to translate the data for each individual brand into a so-called ‘ awareness index ’ ; and many of their clients have fallen into the tempting habit of using this single number as a measure of the effectiveness of a commercial or campaign , rather than taking the trouble to make a more detailed study of the data underlying the index . |
11 | This store in Thame is one of those which will continue trading , but people in the town say they are not surprised other shops have run into trouble … |
12 | Since then the homes of several well-known authors have come into the Trust 's care . |
13 | Cook away until the anchovies have vanished into a pulp and the sauce has thickened up slightly , possibly 30 minutes . |
14 | But dealing with those in the foam ( which contains four times as much ) is more difficult — attempts to develop disposal methods have run into high costs . |
15 | Since April 's farce , more than 60 innovative suggestions for alternative starting methods have flooded into Aintree . |
16 | Since last April 's farce , more than 60 innovative suggestions for alternative starting methods have flooded into Aintree from racing organisations and individuals all over the world . |
17 | These days , of course , the relatively primitive Lazarsfeldian methods have grown into the full mathematical eloquence of causal modelling , factor and cluster analysis , and more , encouraged by the power of the modern computer to handle larger and larger data sets and their mathematical analysis . |
18 | The reason England has n't produced a heavyweight champion of the world , he adds casually , is that most of the contenders have gone into football . |
19 | A typical contemporary assumption is spelled out by Gortz , who claims that ‘ working-class demands have turned into consumerist mass demands . |
20 | Her lips have drawn into a thin line . |
21 | A CLUTCH of Russian-built aircraft have imported into the UK by well-known aerobatic pilot Mark Jefferies . |
22 | Although environmental risks have grown into the business domain in the last decade , they are not being accepted whole-heartedly by the insurance industry . |
23 | The sheds have fallen into disrepair and are described as ‘ Sad and strange . ’ |
24 | Party people from Donna Summer to pioneer DJ and remixer Walter Gibbons have boogied into the sexual inferno of disco and emerged from the flames as Bible-spouting just-born Christians . |
25 | But Humphrey and Wobble and Dot have come into their prime . |
26 | Her social questionnaires have delved into the motivations of those individuals involved with the subject , and she has tried to discover their opinions , social status , and political and religious affiliations . |
27 | Faced with the problem of induction and related problems , inductivists have run into one difficulty after another in their attempts to construe science as a set of statements that can be established as true or probably true in the light of given evidence . |
28 | One reviewer of the Salon des Indépendants of 1912 writes : ‘ Now that the Cubists have grown into a school their works occupy several rooms and are to be seen in several exhibitions ’ , and another : ‘ the Cubists are to be found in force ’ . |
29 | Lord and Lady Harrowby have moved into a wing to make the state rooms available for conferences and functions . |
30 | Except at weekends and on holidays , their parents have got into the you-snap-first-and-I'll-snap-back syndrome . |