Example sentences of "[vb mod] [adv] [verb] [verb] into " in BNC.
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1 | The scheme has been approved by UK energy secretary , John Wakeham , who has indicated that it may eventually become incorporated into building regulations for new houses . |
2 | ‘ We do not think it is possible to deny that there are circumstances in which individuals may justifiably choose to enter into a homosexual relationship ... [ although ] such a relationship could not be regarded as the moral or social equivalent of marriage . ' |
3 | No , I should not have moved into the second Person . |
4 | Foreplay , for instance , can rightly be defined as an activity intended to culminate in sexual intercourse , which means an engaged couple should not have entered into this yet . |
5 | ‘ With hindsight , perhaps we should n't have gone into a peripheral business , ’ he concedes . |
6 | She should have left Rome as she 'd planned , she should never have looked into her heart and discovered a truth that could destroy her . |
7 | Fergie , of course , should never have married into the Royal Family at all . |
8 | I want to argue that partnerships should actively begin to research into the best of business practice , understand what it is about and create structured opportunities for education to learn , transfer and absorb . |
9 | Do not necessarily accept the doctor 's word for this , you have your own duty to the client and the doctor may not have taken into account the importance of the case itself to the client 's best interest . |
10 | By this stage , you may already have booked into a dog training class . |
11 | You may just want to dip into the subject via books . |
12 | But he may not have done another thing ; he may just have faded into obscurity if he 'd lived on . ’ |
13 | … if the expert added up his figures wrongly ; or took something into account which he ought not to have taken into account , or conversely : or interpreted the agreement wrongly : or proceeded on some erroneous principle . |
14 | All that was in essence known to HQ 5 Corps was that the greater number of these people were " Cossacks " or " Russians " making up various units who had found themselves in Austria because to a greater or lesser extent they had been associated with the Germans , and had surrendered to the British in the hope that they might thus avoid falling into the hands of the Communists . |
15 | And do n't forget , Roger , ’ Benjamin added , ‘ with the window slamming shut , the inside latch might just have fallen into place . ’ |
16 | Well , we might just happen to bump into each other , might n't we ? |
17 | Not one of those books on healthy vaginas and wombs which Marigold might easily have looked into but a work on the nasty bacilli which may infest the human reproductive organs after a bungled or septic abortion . |
18 | If Jennifer continued to ladle the sympathy on Helen– the latter might tactically have brought into the conversation something that she knows to be a vulnerable area for Jennifer . |
19 | ‘ If Steve does n't come back for a few days I 'll probably have to go into Palma and see the airlines and the tourist board myself . ’ |
20 | If this kind of thing was allowed to continue , she might well start swaggering into Sunday service and shouting things like ‘ Bugger ! ’ or ‘ Piss off ! ’ if she found someone in her seat . |
21 | The first practice probably encouraged the retention of many old and large flail-threshing barns which might otherwise have fallen into disuse , inviting demolition . |
22 | Social workers were given specific help in identifying their function to find ways to keep old people at home who might otherwise have gone into a residential home . |
23 | We had been told that the loans system would deter people who might otherwise have gone into higher education because of the so-called financial hardship that they would face . |
24 | Not only did factors draw on it in some years for London , but later in the century the rise of Plymouth as a naval centre provided a counter attraction for corn from its eastern half which might otherwise have gone into the increasingly populous western mining districts . |
25 | If you suffered an injury — like a slipped disc , a dislocated knee — or if you needed a hip replacement or maybe something even more serious , you 'd naturally want to go into hospital without a long delay . |
26 | He could scarcely have packed into a single letter more matter offensive to the ideals of the reformed papacy . |
27 | ‘ The fish were really distressed and could not avoid bashing into each other with the water level so low . |
28 | ‘ The Seat car hit the Chevette , and a Cavalier car that was travelling behind it could not avoid crashing into it . ’ |
29 | I knew I looked a mess and I could not face going into class in that state . |
30 | Uncle Hilbert , however , was only just sixty , very hale and hearty , still very much in practice as a solicitor , and Lewis could not imagine stepping into his shoes , nor did he in those days think it very nice to anticipate such things . |