Example sentences of "would [verb] [adv prt] into the " in BNC.

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1 The water , he concludes , would rush out into the Atlantic ; the coasts of England and France would totter , shift and reunite ; the Channel would cease to exist .
2 After throwing the plates on the table , she would rush out into the garden in an attempt to cool down .
3 In their small hamlets drink was associated with Cossack brutality , when horsemen would swoop down into the Jewish shtetels after Easter and terrorize the people .
4 From time to time she would glance back into the room , her eyes coming to rest on the casually seated figure of Tsu Ma .
5 My father used to spend hours on the lavatory smoking and reading the paper ; when he finally emerged at my mother 's disgusted summons , a rich smell of shit and tobacco would sidle out into the corridor .
6 He knew that by-and-by , when they were ripe , they would drop down into the ground ; there they would keep soft and warm for a while , then they would grow into more plants , with seeds , so there would always be plants on the earth …
7 The next message would spill over into the financial pages , though there is still a bit of theology — verses 4 to 8 .
8 It should be explained that while the above three communities were primarily concerned with economic matters , it was always anticipated that the process of integrating economies would spill over into the political sphere .
9 Once through , the tanks would press on into the enemy 's main body , preparing the way for the armoured infantry to clear any remaining opposition .
10 The sybarites who wanted the hot water bath or the hot air bath would pass through into the slightly heated room one stage farther in , and undress there , then go on in to whichever they fancied .
11 that would go up into the forty percent
12 Aside from the practical aspects of caring for the young people , there was much talk of spiritual care and regeneration , so that the young men at Elpis Lodge would go out into the world ‘ imbued and enlightened with the hope of a better future ’ , and not embittered by the ill-treatment and injustice they had experienced .
13 The ‘ empate ’ was developed where men , women and children would go out into the forest and surround trees about to be cut down .
14 Here permission was given for the construction of a large courtyard development of twenty-six houses and flats , quite out of character with the compact eighteenth-century house , in the belief that the profits yielded from the sale of the flats would go back into the house .
15 She learnt that these plates did not come up to the manufacturer 's high standards and would go back into the melting pot .
16 He used his fingers and the stick , he scuffled food into his mouth from the pan which he held close by his mouth so that any pieces that fell from his fingers or lips would go back into the container , not onto the ground .
17 He would go down into the cellar tomorrow and put down some rat poison .
18 He would go off into the mountains for days on end .
19 She was always busy with these pages , working out the correct day for planting date trees , for pollinating or foretelling the week when the pods would burst and the golden maidenhair would tumble out into the sun , each hair holding the promise of a cluster of dates .
20 I would come back into the house feeling so humiliated that I would just sit down and cry and then the baby would start crying so I had to stop .
21 The note read ‘ I knew you would come back into the house , so please take some food .
22 When his father was tucked up for the night , the son would wander out into the garden and enjoy the cool air as a contrast to the fug of the sick-room .
23 When you stayed away from me , I would try in vain to will you back beside me : then , long after the dinner I waited for you to share but had to eat alone , I would wander out into the stony streets , hoping to bump into you , to glimpse you sitting in a bar or on a park bench :
24 Clouds of dust would fly up into the air , drift around the flat for a while , then settle on the beds and desk and chairs .
25 Under certain circumstances indeed water would be taken upwards by the lift-for instance , if the bulk of the traffic was downwards and barges loaded to 65 tons , then each barge passing down would squeeze out into the top pond 3.150 cu. ft. ( or about ⅓ of a lock ) of water This however is an ideal case and the following statement shews the theoretical gain or loss of water which would occur in working out of these lifts .
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