Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] into [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Also in February he was discussing ideas for a Botticelli ballet and for a Debussy ballet ; these eventually coalesced into one idea , Primavera .
2 After about 20 years of critical success which rarely translated into public acclaim , his new novel , Affliction ( Picador , £12.95 ) , has hit big in the US .
3 The technology was invented in the early 1920s by Anton Flettner , a German naval engineer , and has since fallen into undeserved oblivion .
4 On a minor , but parallel line , from the 1740s onwards the aesthetic rich began building rustic , Gothick and Chinese garden houses and this picturesque style slowly crept into small house architecture .
5 She waited , watching as the pain and bewilderment slowly dissolved into murderous fury .
6 In His place , and with His power , something else had slowly congealed into transcendental existence .
7 Now , you , for instance , " she said , her vague look suddenly sharpening into pinpointed attention , " you , I should think , do .
8 No doubt some owners are lucky enough to fall into that category — but most of us have to scrimp and save to keep our horses happy .
9 What does , what what only goes into conventional memory not into expanded ?
10 Although directors and officers ' liability insurance has been available in the UK since the 1930s , it has only come into wide use in the last few years .
11 The light from below conjured into sharp gold and black every subtlety of the great forehead , and made the cajoling mouth piercingly beautiful and kind , but the demon still inhabited the gaunt pits of his eyes .
12 Though popularity did not necessarily translate into greater recognition in official circles , it did inhibit those in the two governments who would have liked to ditch him altogether .
13 I believe in a competitive world , but at the same time I think we have got to be laying sound foundations for future growth and if we are constantly pressured into satisfying stock-market expectations , which are short-term , or under threat of take-over , we will not be investing enough for the long-term development of our businesses .
14 He suddenly swam into vocal range again .
15 Somebody had obviously come into some money .
16 We sometimes surprise ourselves as well as our near and dear ones by suddenly exploding into unreasonable anger over a trifling offence which just happens to be the last straw that breaks the camel 's back .
17 I was only on the drug for seven days and by the seventh day , I 'd suddenly turned into some sort of maniac .
18 The events of his life are constantly incorporated into this spiel .
19 Gently ease into this position and repeat with your left leg out to the side .
20 This was all turning into Saturday-morning chapter play .
21 In practice , many school children had already been long integrated into industrial production : the windscreen wipers or the ubiquitous Dacia 1300 , for instance , were often assembled by fifteen-year-olds in Transylvanian Sibiu .
22 Their delicacy is indicated by the opening air raid siren of the opening track which suddenly explodes into New Age of Total Warfare .
23 In addition , there is more provision outside the state system and residential services appear less integrated into wider family and community approaches than would be the case in a generic social services department in the United Kingdom .
24 It recommends , however , that the subject be better integrated into mainstream transport teaching and examinations ( including those of the CIT ) .
25 With all the airspace restrictions in operation it is most important to keep track of your location so that the glider does not inadvertently stray into controlled airspace or other restricted areas .
26 We could sit in a meeting in the Sit(uation) Room and be discussing these other activities , and fall into almost a kind of , you know , warp in which you would n't know whether you were talking — I mean , the use of shorthand and so forth in the discussions you could n't tell whether we 'd suddenly slipped into this question of selling arms to get them back this way or whether we were still discussing the other thing .
27 The phenomenon is a relatively recent one , since diminished responsibility was only introduced into English law in 1957 , in response to long-standing dissatisfaction with the insanity defence .
28 Even if one gets different results , they are still publishable without necessarily running into head-on confrontation with the earlier claims .
29 Robert Layton will be flying at about 2,000 feet to stay below commercial flight routes , low enough to run into bad weather , or his worst nightmare , fog as he crosses the Channel .
30 So an organisation may work very well if its people are motivated or skilled but suddenly run into bad trouble if the level of motivation or skill should fall .
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