Example sentences of "[vb base] [not/n't] [verb] into [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | When thou wert young and robust and strongly knit , thou did'st not go into battle without a coat of mail . ’ |
2 | The level of unemployment , at least in the short to medium term , is likely to remain high ; therefore , so the argument goes , it is essential that unemployed people , in both their own interests and those of the wider society , do not drift into alienation or even ‘ subversion ’ . |
3 | That will help insure you do not go into debt due to unforeseen , but inevitable , emergencies . |
4 | If they do not go into farming , there is real reason for gloom because it could well mean the end of the Scottish farming industry . |
5 | Do not sidetrack into dwelling on what is wrong with it . |
6 | The Borough Education Committee had invited tenders for the supply of faggots , but the committee replied that ‘ the Guardians do not enter into competition with the trade ’ . |
7 | Credit unions , while initiating from the wish of people to have greater control over their own affairs , do not come into existence spontaneously . |
8 | Sentences ( 2b ) and ( 2d ) do not come into consideration at all . |
9 | By killing off the stable element of the fictional character , she abandons a realist notion of the individual identity and the narrative norms which subtend it , freeing the way for a concept of subjectivity and a form of writing in which these factors do not come into play . |
10 | Now there 's one thing that I have to alert us all to the rest may not have been important , perhaps only to some of the larger churches but groups are advised and churches are advised to make sure that in buildings that are used ah , for many different groups that young children under the age of eight do not come into contact with any casual people who may be using that building . |
11 | In certain regions the sclerites do not come into apposition by sutures and are thus , as it were , islands of cuticle surrounded by membrane . |
12 | The particular provisions of the Planning and Compensation Act 1991 in the consideration of which my hon. Friend played such a distinguished part do not come into force until next month , so directors of planning will not yet have had the benefit of the provisions . |
13 | They simply do not put into effect the rules that the Community agrees . |
14 | The number of hotel-based leisure complexes that do not take into consideration the operation of a facility at the same time as its aesthetics are plain for all to see . |
15 | It is not easy to achieve this effect if they do not take into account the dimension and spacing of the steps as well as their particular quality , which must be in tune with the music if it is to make sense . |
16 | The figures do not take into account the drought payments . |
17 | The figures do not take into account the stress which may be caused by the competitive element involved ; they relate simply to the physical benefits . ) |
18 | But biogas programmes will only create new problems if their designers do not take into account local economic and social conditions ( New Scientist , vol 97 , p 377 ) . |
19 | Any investigations into the suitability of rock formations are , they say , based on assumptions of how that ground will behave now , and do not take into account the possibility of climatic changes , earthquake activity or even human intervention in years to come . |
20 | Because such systems do not take into account the variation in individuals , they are generally only of interest to the classicist . |
21 | These figures do not take into account irregular employment , and so those for unskilled labour in particular have to be treated with caution . |
22 | The interest rates are calculated in the way required by the Consumer Credit Act and do not take into account any tax relief that could be gained for a home improvements loan . |
23 | Because such systems do not take into account the variation in individuals , they are generally only of interest to the classicist . |
24 | They do not take into account movement reductions due to armour , as this may vary depending on how you choose to equip your troops . |
25 | First , proposals for reform — such proposals will be discussed more fully below — ultimately fail in their intentions because they do not take into account the social , economic and political nature of today 's society and the way that important relationships have changed . |
26 | They do not take into account movement reductions due to armour , as this may vary depending on how you choose to equip your troops . |
27 | They do not take into account movement reductions due to armour , as this can vary depending on how you choose to equip your troops . |
28 | The main criticisms of QALYs focus on two central points : firstly , that QALYs are unfair because they do not take into account who gains the QALYs ; secondly , that ‘ welfare ’ is not the only value to be put into the equation . |
29 | Our data were subject to several constraints : a far lower response rate from probation officers in the second survey ; the effects of changes in agency policies and practices during the two survey years ( e.g. medics ' notifying practices , police detection efforts/successes ) ; the ‘ loss ’ of some users identified in the first survey , and of some new users , to institutions and agencies not covered by the research ( e.g. custody , rehabilitation units , drug agencies in adjacent areas ) ; disillusionment with some agencies among heroin users ( particularly medical services ) , which may have produced a higher ratio of unknown to known users than in the previous year ; the optimistic assumption of 20 per cent annual outcidence-for instance , one review of follow-up studies of opioid users suggests that outcidence after one year is typically around 10 per cent , and may only reach 40–50 per cent after ten years , even for those who have received ‘ treatment ’ ( Home Office 1986 , ch. 7 ) ; and the decline in the size of the youth population , due largely to the drop in the birth rate during the 1960s-that is , the absolute number of known heroin users could decrease while the rate per 1,000 youths remained the same or even increased ( the population figures from which our prevalence rates were calculated derived from 1981 Census statistics , and do not take into account projected trends ) . |
30 | But even then , such estimates do not take into account certain types of income which must be included for an accurate picture . |