Example sentences of "[verb] [pron] [adv prt] into [art] " in BNC.
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1 | Then he led them down into the bloody cloud again . |
2 | At last Cranston finished his further refreshment and , with Benedicta so close beside him his heart kept skipping for joy , Athelstan led them out into the great cleared area of Smithfield . |
3 | " My mother is threatening to dismiss all the staff unless I tell her which one of them admitted me back into the house last night . |
4 | He led me out into the snow and we crossed the island towards the beach . |
5 | He led me back into the house and up to Southgate 's chamber . |
6 | You 're sticking them back into a |
7 | Rescuers have tried unsuccessfully to drive them out into the open sea using a line of boats with their engines running . |
8 | Is actually to terrify the p poor and to drive them in into a s an under and this is part of their philosophy that they 've been following since nineteen seventy nine under Mrs Thatcher . |
9 | The swing of the hurricane was bringing them back into the eye of the storm . |
10 | It was always a project which was in parallel with Queen , because we always had a positive attitude to people doing stuff outside the band , getting new experiences and bringing them back into the band . |
11 | Weekend reports suggest that the long-term unemployed — those out of work longer than 12 months — will benefit from a £300 million scheme aimed at bringing them back into the workforce . |
12 | By promoting economic aspects and bringing them out into the open for everyone to see , we are contributing towards better informed decisions on the part of prescribers and policy makers alike . ’ |
13 | ‘ Or you could throw someone out into the Connaught Tunnel . |
14 | Sank me back into the past , |
15 | The new novel has married the pair and moved them on into the mid-Sixties and from the provinces to London , where Patrick works misgivingly in a fashionable publishing-house . |
16 | The new mothers were ravenous and it was easy to coax them back into the house . |
17 | The throng in front of Owen melted away , leaving his men exposed , so he drew them back into the shadows . |
18 | Quigley beat me through into the back kitchen . |
19 | An investigation by the Japanese Fisheries Agency concluded in an announcement by the Foreign Ministry that the dolphins had committed a " mass suicide " from which local fisherman had been trying to save them by driving them back into the sea . |
20 | If so , press them back into the soil . |
21 | Spare parts , says Mendoros , ‘ helped me back into the market ’ . |
22 | The old gentleman who was the owner of the shop encouraged me and helped me along into the business . |
23 | Oxford United are facing their own big challenge … four defeats in a row has dropped them back into the bottom half of the table … last home win was this one against Millwall … tomorrow they should … they must dish out the same treatment to struggling Southend |
24 | Rincewind looked around wildly , and then with wild improvisation drew himself up into a wizardly pose . |
25 | Cornelius fanned at his trouser bottoms and slowly drew himself back into the vertical plane . |
26 | He had squeezed himself back into the side-car with his long legs stretched flat along the floor of the rectangular alloy box . |
27 | Cathy went into the shop and Wycliffe let himself out into the little hall from which stairs led up to the flat . |
28 | His visual impressions have been fading without his knowing it , and with their reactivation stale information has suddenly sorted itself out into a new and firm pattern . |
29 | And road again drops you down into the , you go on the ring road of course , |
30 | GEC , under the guidance of Lord Weinstock , built itself up into the largest manufacturing employer in the UK , producing a wide range of products from telecommunications to defence electronics . |