Example sentences of "[vb past] into [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Members of certain ethnic and caste groups clustered into specific occupations .
2 As the death toll mounted , and the futility of the war of attrition on the Western Front seeped into public consciousness , the pacifists moved onto the offensive .
3 Inevitably , in time , some of the progressive ideas being put forward seeped into public consciousness .
4 Now the rattle and roar of the tube faded abruptly as it surfaced into bright sunlight .
5 As it flopped its way forward , the vulnerable underside came down on the ring just as the mini-grenade in the stone erupted into satisfying flame .
6 Throughout 1988 there were reports of growing unrest in Armenia which eventually erupted into major dashes , with tales of large-scale rioting and murder with tanks and troops on the streets .
7 Tensions between ethnic groups in Sind ( see pp. 37150-51 ) again erupted into major violence on Oct. 1 , 1989 , when members of the extremist Sind National Alliance ( SNA ) , demanding independence for the province , occupied Sukkar airport and burnt the Pakistani flag .
8 The repugnance they felt towards more decorated churches occasionally erupted into violent bouts of iconoclasm .
9 Frustration in urban areas over the first round defeat of the main opposition Democratic Party ( DP ) erupted into anti-communist rioting on the morning of April 2 in the northern city of Shkodër .
10 The conditions of service , the harshness of the environment , the atrocious difficulties associated with travel and food supplies , the ravages of scurvy , and the son of men who went out in search of new lands for the tsar , all contributed to the tense atmosphere which sometimes erupted into bloody conflict .
11 In 1937 Sino-Japanese friction erupted into full-scale war , but even this failed to rally much more than token support for China in the West .
12 From time to time the tensions of clerical dualism erupted into fierce controversy , but in 1341 at least the eruption resulted in no marked shift in clergy-laity relations , not even with regard to the employment of clerical ministers by the crown .
13 As the sun rose into clear skies and burned down on the plain of the Forth , you would say the exposed army opposite would have the worst of it , despite their shields and their awnings .
14 He was to be found lurking in the band 's dressing room whenever they ventured into Mancunian territory , which was often .
15 He also ventured into musical commerce , and after joining with John Longman as Longman , Clementi & Co. , 1798–1801 , he entered into partnership with F. W. Collard [ q.v. ] and others as music publisher , dealer , and pianoforte maker as Clementi & Co. , 1801–6 .
16 It would seem that the primary activity of operations needs to be split into direct and indirect costs , with the latter analysed into major cost-driver categories as interpreted by Kaplan .
17 Many women who moved into occasional prostitution through economic necessity had probably already had previous sexual experience , and for many the distinction between occasional sex with a young wooer and clandestine prostitution may have remained fluid .
18 As the laws were changed to prohibit the use of certain tools , they moved into other substances that were still within the law .
19 In partnership with others , David Davies moved into other fields when , in 1864 , he leased land in the Rhondda Valley for the sinking of mine shafts .
20 Another modification introduced in 1992 was that any business which moved into new premises would inherit the transitional relief ( i.e. the phasing in allowance ) of the previous occupant .
21 IBM also moved into new fields through various alliances with small insurgent innovators .
22 We moved into new offices in Singapore and overall our local operations based on extended DGPS networks and radio positioning services had record sales .
23 From this one might interpret ecclesiastical coinage as money originally minted for pious purposes , for alms and perhaps for tithe , which then moved into general circulation in a society in which many different types of coinage were accepted .
24 The sequence shows the partly clear skies that moved into central England this afternoon as the earlier band of rain cleared away eastward , but that large area of speckled cloud northwest of Ireland will bring wintry showers tonight .
25 A group of Teleuts , in tsarist documents known as the vyezzhye belye Kalmyki , moved into Russian-held territory and settled there out of reach of the Teleut princes .
26 He enrolled in The Open University as a student of Earth Sciences and , with his wife 's support , he sold their home in Bearsden , moved into rented accommodation in Livingstone and with his small capital , rented factory premises to set up his own small business .
27 Not unexpectedly , this officer left the police and moved into academic life .
28 After directing the Verity films , the company she and Sydney formed during the Second World War , she moved into independent feature production .
29 It pulled out of mining and consumer electronics , and moved into medical equipment .
30 In autumn 1940 Japan moved into northern French Indo-China in an attempt to restrict supplies to the Chinese , and as a preliminary to creating a Japanese-controlled zone in Southeast Asia .
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