Example sentences of "[noun sg] [conj] [verb] [adv prt] into " in BNC.
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1 | Each year straw equivalent to 3.6 million tonnes of coal is wasted , usually burnt in the field or ploughed back into the ground . |
2 | Every culture , however imperfectly and blindly , either turned towards the light or fell back into the darkness . |
3 | Then we came to a smashed yellow stone façade and a doorway that led down into a cellar . |
4 | He comes pounding down the ladder , and grabs the wheel and stampedes back into the waves . |
5 | The car picked up speed and shot off into the distance . |
6 | The class struggle between bourgeoisie and proletariat became ever more intense ; mounting economic crises followed in rapid succession and spilled over into the catastrophe of world war . |
7 | He limped to the side of the roof and looked down into the yard . |
8 | I finish my tea and climb back into the Toyota . |
9 | When viruses succeed in binding to cell membrane receptors they still have to enter the cell and break up into separated proteins and genetic material before they can replicate . |
10 | She even put on sheer stockings and a brief pleated skirt instead of her usual jeans , then , as final proof of her new outlook on life , she put on the new pink sweater and danced out into the sitting-room , calling . |
11 | He then made the sign of the cross , said a Requiem for the poor steward 's soul , re-locked the hut , returned the key to the priest and wandered back into Cheapside . |
12 | He made her as comfortable as possible on the back seat of the car and drove off into the night . |
13 | In the end , Anna borrowed Lady Vestey 's BMW car and drove off into the night , angry and humiliated at her very public snub . |
14 | Meanwhile Aureole had got into top gear and came through into second place , but try as he might he could never pose a threat to Pinza , who galloped on relentlessly to win by four lengths , with Pink Horse running on to take third place a length and a half further adrift and the gallant Shikampur a tired fourth . |
15 | They passed under the stone archway and went out into Castle Street . |
16 | He just got on the horse and launched off into space , landed in the lake and he 's swimming it out . ’ |
17 | So it 's very easy for bacteria , which are always present around the anus , to reach the usually bacteria-free urethra and travel up into the bladder where they multiply and irritate the bladder lining . |
18 | So the days were unhappy and the nights a bleak nothingness , and although I never actually put a rope around that pulley , nor loaded my shotgun and went out into the field and dug my own grave — as I had visualized so often — nor started my engine in the garage , yet I thought about all three , and on occasions I thought about one or other for days at a time . |
19 | Then he unfroze , pulled the trigger of the shotgun and leapt back into cover , all in the same movement . |
20 | There was an ache in my middle as if a rock was lodged in the place where all my habits had been — my going-to-bed routine of always brushing my teeth last thing of all so that my mouth felt glowing fresh before I curled up under my duvet and drifted off into sleep . |
21 | Finally , this great natural funnel gave the maelstrom no alternative but to rear up into that great familiar wave . |
22 | And he said he was working with an old fellow which is getting on in age and he was quite absent minded and he said , I was about thirty feet from the ground on a ledge er filling er s a hole ready for shot for blasting and the old fellow was about twenty feet higher than him and then he was ss er whatsit another hole and then a at the top of the chamber there 's a little hole , he said , like a roof we call it which is a little passage that goes up into the next floor and then we used that as an escape route he did n't have to go far . |
23 | It was only when she had closed the door behind her and was hurrying along the corridor that led back into the hall that she noticed the painting . |
24 | Beginning by a fantastic attempt to construct pedigrees where sons were their own fathers , I became gradually so involved that I remember wondering if God the Father were in truth only the child that grew up into Jesus Christ . |
25 | I put the kettle , already nicely blackened and battered , into the pile of ash and climb back into my camp bed . |
26 | In its drive stood a Japanese four-wheel-drive vehicle and as Meredith looked across the laburnum hedge at it , a woman of about her own age came out of the house , slamming the door crossly , got into the vehicle and reversed out into the road , driving off at speed . |
27 | Its vineyards , which have grown both black and white grapes for well over a hundred years , form a horseshoe around the Montagne d'Avize , starting with south-west-facing slopes south-west of the village , bending into a bank of north-facing vines at the back of the village and curving round into north-east-facing slopes close to the village of Cramant . |
28 | Old Red acknowledged that with a nod and walked on into the corridor . |
29 | Ruth pushed it back into the full glare of the sun and slumped down into it , raising her face to the hot sun to absorb its rays . |
30 | Hands thrust inside his jacket pockets , Kuhlmann went over to the window and stared down into the courtyard again . |