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

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1 The fighting continued , spreading off the great curve of the ramparts down into the buildings below .
2 Wedges of red-sashed men were driving in up and down the catwalk , cutting the defenders off into pockets .
3 We are particularly anxious to bring the courts back into use for the 1993 season , so we would be most grateful if the application could be dealt with as soon as possible .
4 She thanked him without warmth and stuffed the notes casually into her bag .
5 So it shoots the notes down into the body better , and the whole instrument resonates .
6 Theda sat on the bed and took the fingers gently into her hand .
7 We decided to spread the baits around into some new areas which could now be comfortably fished due to the removal of the carp rods .
8 Melanie nervously clattered the animals back into the box .
9 Then he ducked under the lintel and climbed the steps up into the kitchen , Beth following .
10 I tried to plead and argue but was only beaten for my pains and thrown down the steps back into my cell ; the dungeon door , grating shut , was locked securely behind us .
11 4/I continue to divide the shapes up into smaller and smaller shapes .
12 I continue to divide the shapes up into smaller and smaller shapes .
13 Among certain groups living in southern Africa the labia can be as long as seven inches and the owners of such equipment have to push the lips back into the vaginal opening in order to get on with their daily tasks .
14 His action only had the effect of helping to throw the Moravians too into the arms of Byzantine Christianity .
15 Once the stretcher rails are together , loosely locate them in the back legs and drive the legs home into the seat and the rails into the legs .
16 When we grouped the sectors approximately into local government districts and then ranked them on density of oil workers , this ranking coincided with that based on data for offshore workers in the 1981 census , suggesting that our data was not affected by geographic bias .
17 He turned , taking the thin paper box in which the ch'a brick had come and set it down , sweeping the fragments up into it , then dropped in the two largest pieces .
18 She maintains the changes were essential to get the books back into libraries .
19 Not bothering to put the designs back into the black plastic cylinder , Paul stuffed them under his arm .
20 We 're preventing caravans entering because we want to er prevent and incursion by the gypsies back into the park again , having spent several weeks trying to get them out , and another week or two er clearing the place up after them .
21 You melt the bones down into stock .
22 At the back of the machine , on our level , an ingenious device separates out most of the stones : a circular rubber pad revolves below brushes , which are stiff enough to sweep the potatoes off into their special channel , but not rigid enough to dislodge the stones until later .
23 Melt the chocolate in a bowl over hot water and dip the meringues diagonally into the chocolate .
24 And for more than a mile they threaded their way around the standing pools that reached from the verges out into the drying roadway .
25 Evan continued to lecture and lead students to locations in the mountains right into his eighties .
26 We need to ‘ internalize the externalities ’ — to bring all the costs back into the box so that the consumer pays the full price .
27 ‘ It 's bringing the woodlands back into production that 's important , ’ he says .
28 Marie took the stockings back into the living-room .
29 Day and night toxic waste pours out of the factories straight into the sea , poisoning the waters which once provided them with a living as independent fishermen .
30 The new gravestone was already in place , and he worked solidly for several hours in the churchyard , putting the plants carefully into the soft earth of her grave .
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