Example sentences of "the [adj] [noun pl] into a " in BNC.
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1 | By 1973 Mr Suharto had forced the Islamic parties into a single body — the United Development Party , whose leaders were carefully screened . |
2 | This factor seems to have made a solid contribution towards forging the Iranian forces into a much more effective fighting machine than might have been expected in 1979 . |
3 | Mr Pelizzoni worked hard to restructure the group , by selling its industrial stakes and turning the property owned by the regional consortia into a chain of stores . |
4 | David Checketts was his first private secretary , a former squadron leader in the RAF who had been equerry to the Duke of Edinburgh , and was the perfect person to help the Prince make the transition from the armed services into a full-time working member of the ‘ family firm ’ . |
5 | People who put the wrong things into a bin can be fined , theoretically , up to DM100,000 ( $12,400 ) . |
6 | It will now be useful to describe all three using mechanical models since this shows where the bistable fits into a complete picture . |
7 | The discovery of a national catastrophe led the forest-loving Germans into a maelstrom of surveys , scientific investigations and conferences . |
8 | As he left the studio after the interview his well-programmed defence mechanism had come into operation , and he had pushed the painful memories into a corner of his brain where his conscious mind could not reach them . |
9 | They also rejected Mazowiecki 's attempt to transform the civic committees into a single political party loyal to him . |
10 | In France there had already been speculation , followed by disaster , when John Law persuaded the government to unite all the French colonies into a single vast Company for trading up the Mississippi and in the Indies , which was then used as the base for a wild expansion of the French currency . |
11 | The faults of their guns drove the French aces into a frenzy ; in the air , they jammed at critical moments ; on landing , they had a nasty habit of firing unexpectedly , often shooting up ground crews . |
12 | He did as I suggested , dropping the wet clothes into a corner by the back door . |
13 | Here we collect the different methods into a systematic list , referring back to the other chapters for examples . |
14 | It was ‘ How Soon Is Now ’ that had initially made the serious inroads into a vast American audience . |
15 | This reveals neither cathode ( tungsten 0.75 mm diameter ) nor output loop , but makes clear the method of incorporating the coupled resonators into a small solid copper anode block . |
16 | This was possible mainly because the capacity for viewing personal identity in terms of language and ‘ languages ’ , which was to become the hallmark of her work from the 1960s onward , is integrated in the early novels into a realist narrative mode . |
17 | According to your age , you can pay the following amounts into a pension scheme and obtain tax relief : |
18 | Its foundation as the capital of Scotland in the late eleventh century , and its development in the following centuries into a distinctive city crowded on a hill within a defensive wall can be traced through its buildings . |
19 | The protest action in the Silesian coal mines changed over the following days into a continuous strike supported by most unions , aimed at changing the government 's restructuring policy , securing the creation of a fund to rescue the coal industry and halting the fall in real wages . |
20 | • fuse the separate Establishments into a single and efficient business organisation with a streamlined asset base , |
21 | Mswati did not specify who would decide on the incorporation of the Vusela-2 recommendations into a new constitution , neither did he give a new date for elections , which had been due in November , although he said on Oct. 26 that they would be held in the first half of 1993 . |
22 | Her other hand had screwed the three fivers into a loose ball of paper . |
23 | John , on the other hand , has moulded various moves from the three arts into a system suitable to his own physique . |
24 | Similarly , the course of improvement from infectious illnesses accompanied by fever has been commonly held to be intimately connected with sleeping , so that a fever typically " breaks " during the night , while the temperature reaches a maximal high , and then as it reverts to near-normal the patient falls into a deep restorative sleep . |
25 | By introducing rat genes encoding the MHC-linked transporters into a human cell line lacking both transporter and proteasome subunit genes , we show here that the MHC-encoded proteasome subunits are not essential for stable MHC class I surface expression , or for processing and presentation of antigenic peptides from influenza virus and an intracellular protein . |
26 | As with cathedral buildings , time was entrusted with the task of seasoning and moulding the diverse parts into a harmonious whole . |
27 | Early on the morning of the evacuation the families were preparing to embark when , in full sight of the military escort , gunmen surrounded the plane , forced the 11 men into a truck at gunpoint , and drove them off into the bush . |
28 | The sun was arcing towards the horizon , turning the ancient ruins into a place of magic — a place where not only Romans had once walked , but barbarians , too . |
29 | The problem for beginning readers is to decode the visual symbols into a form which can be recognised , for it is only then that they will be able to bring previously gained knowledge to bear upon the meaning of the text . |
30 | When the Royal Africa Company collapsed under the weight of its fixed costs , the need for permanent bases on the West African coast — essential if only because half-a-dozen other European countries were setting up forts there — led the government first to try to organize the slave-trading merchants into a loosely organized company which would be responsible for looking after the forts , and then to provide a subsidy to keep them going . |