Example sentences of "[v-ing] [adv] [adv] into the " in BNC.

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1 We 'll go no more a-screwing So late into the night , Though the heart is still as loving And the moon is still as bright .
2 He was walking purposefully through into the garden , a huge lawn with an abundance of mimosa and roses , and untamed greenery bordering the edges .
3 Maybe it was the abrupt pain of thinking about Tara , or the sudden recollection that this man blending so effortlessly into the family gathering was not to be trusted , but Virginia found herself cutting into the convivial mood and causing a sudden , rather surprised silence .
4 The crew divided to right and left according to where their jobs were and , following Emil , I found myself climbing up not into the dining car but into one of the sleeping cars .
5 We were now climbing fairly steeply into the mountains and silence was impossible if I were not to lose my quarry .
6 The Tiger Fish will lurk , at a head-up angle , among vegetation and roots , blending almost invisibly into the background .
7 Faldo partially blamed his height for starting badly , while Woosnam , at 5ft 4ins , complained of driving too frequently into the rough .
8 ‘ Search me , ’ said Bob , sinking slowly away into the depths again .
9 She dropped her robe on to the stool near by and stepped into the water , sinking slowly down into the warmth .
10 Jackson was standing by a window , a little to one side , looking absently down into the street .
11 The standard housing comes with a flat viewing port giving a reversed viewfinder image looking vertically down into the housing .
12 Even as he did get his bearings a great tree swirled towards him out of the night and a rook he never saw rose up in alarm , cawing darkly away into the storm .
13 Mobuto recoiled in horror , stumbling back painfully into the Studebaker 's wing mirror .
14 ‘ For God 's sake , why ? ’ bleated Frye , returning to the window and looking out briefly into the night at the blurred wreck of the car in the forecourt .
15 The Americans were looking even further into the future .
16 Here you 'll find long sandy beaches in coves between rugged , rocky headlands ; clear blue sea , perfect for swimming and watersports ; sun , sun and more sun of the hot and tanning variety ; and great nightlife with bars , discos and live music going on deep into the night and beyond .
17 It was presented in a further long meeting , going on well into the early hours of the morning , when George Elvin , having conferred with several of his senior colleagues on my telephone , returned to say that they would accept the proposal .
18 Sometimes I wish we did , but our school , in fact , is open five/six days a week and very often there are activities going on well into the evening .
19 Now you know anything about drains , I 've never been down them , but if you kno , if you know anything about them , it goes down about three , four foot , five foot sometimes , and then , there is a , the pipe , the there 's , there 's a ledge there , and then going on down into the , in into the main drains .
20 Beyond , the path was the same — empty in the darkening moonlight and leading gently downhill into the deep shadow of a grove of ilex trees .
21 The large men were flooding largely back into the room .
22 In the meadows by the Lugg , driven by its own weight ever closer to the edge of the water , and trapped by its own trampling ever deeper into the quaking marshy turf , the mass of struggling , hampered men and horses wallowed like a bogged ox .
23 This has often been contrasted with the situation on our side of the Atlantic where one can stand on the coast of south-west Ireland or Brittany and see the fold belts heading straight out into the ocean .
24 Nothing substantial enough to stop the noise going straight downstairs into the bars
25 Although going back well into the nineteenth century , in the past two decades this idea has generated a vast amount of research by psychologists , physiologists , neuroanatomists and other scientists .
26 I mean , I 'm going back well into the haulier days then , three days .
27 Once again the country which complained most about the policy was Britain , which found itself in the position of being a ‘ net contributor ’ to the EC after 1973 , paying far more into the EC than it received back .
28 But Adam did n't cross the Platz der Einheit , turning left instead into the Friedrich Engels Strasse .
29 They have a record going well back into the Cambrian , when it might be supposed that the chordates were undergoing a major diversification .
30 Nor do the new orders pouring almost daily into the UN 's kitchen end with Iraq .
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