Example sentences of "into [art] [noun] i " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I still had a stone in my hand , and the moment the bobby turned into the alley I threw this stone up the other end .
2 Then I launched into the confession I should have told the priest — the one I have written down here .
3 I force her skinny little arms into the position I need and ignore the sharp intake of breath .
4 I 'll bet she thinks that directly she lets me into the A.R.R.U. I 'll do a Charlie Peters !
5 I looked at myself in shop windows and mentally transformed the self that I was , a girl in a dress with ribbons in her hair , into the self I would become , a muscular man on a motorbike wearing a leather jacket .
6 When they grew up and went off into the wild I suffered dreadful pangs .
7 The pUC19 polylinker containing a dimeric insert of T 9 GCA 9 , cloned into the Sma I site , was prepared as previously described [ 25 ] and labelled at the 3'-end of the Hin dIII site .
8 ‘ One good thing to come out of it was that it inspired me to play guitar and turned me into the person I am . ’
9 When I got out into the corridor I saw that a piece of wire had been strung between two beams on either side of the block and that a sort of ladder was leaning against it .
10 I am particularly afraid of strange dentists , so before I went into the RAF I made sure my teeth were in order .
11 As you went into the pub I wanted to prove to your master I could do it .
12 It 's a a bigger , but I think again you 're walking straight into the lounge I think .
13 I give suggestions about savoury , sweet and fruit and vegetable dishes and also about food that will fit into the themes I have described .
14 As Taff and I ducked down into the trench I upset the remains of my meal over the floor .
15 ‘ I really believe rugby helped mould my character into the man I am today .
16 Whilst the , the London Region speakers come into the rostra I 'll just make the point , Peggy in fact is only the third women that 's spoken this morning .
17 Not that I wanted to play chess nor even to frighten the good citizens of Budapest with a glimpse of my bare cadaver — my bathing trunks now also fell off me — but rather that the idea of a character — perhaps fleeing from something or someone — standing in those steaming baths moving queens and pawns , fitted perfectly into the outline I had .
18 You have been patient and you have worked hard , and I fear on many occasions late into the night I 'm sure , you have proved adaptable and er you have been good-tempered .
19 I do n't I thin I think there 's probably a lot lot less sexism just in terms of I think we 've won their respect by you know and and certainly when th they did n't want us to picket in the beginning , and then over the months really the women have done quite a lot of successful picketing when we 've been asked and and we 've staged quite big pickets quite a lot of you know the big pickets were really organized and the rallies have been organized by us and really sort of quite a lot of the input into into the strike I think has come from the women 's support group in in quite a unique way .
20 Q. I intend to make a venturi to fit into a transfer pipe from one filter to the next , to allow the introduction of air into the system I am currently building .
21 Well I never saw the sea on fire but f when we wen went into the sea I mean we were directly beneath the platform , and at that stage I mean the whole platform was on fire .
22 As I came into the hotel I tried to project myself back into a time when I 'd have been thinking — Sunday press party , rather fun .
23 I remembered that I too hated the dust , and as I imagined the walk into the desert I felt the sky come low and very close .
24 Since there are no further hands rushing up into the air I 'll say a few words myself .
25 If I can get three or four dishes into the freezer I can do a dinner party without worrying about being home in time to cook . ’
26 ‘ Better get back into the woods I reckon .
27 ‘ I do n't have a feeling that after putting so much energy and a big piece of my life into the Maryinsky I could leave .
28 So of his falling in love with Mrs Moore we are merely informed that ‘ even if I were free to tell the story , I doubt if it has much to do with the subject of this book , ’ and of his father 's death in the late summer of 1929 that this ‘ does not really come into the story I am telling ’ .
29 No wonder , then , that when he came to write up the experience in Surprised by Joy he should have been so insistent that his father 's last illness and death ‘ does not really come into the story I am telling ’ .
30 Peering into the gloom I moved up , ready for anything , plopped in two comforting nuts , swung across a void , stretched up to creaking jugs and levered up to the arête , fully expecting to face an overhanging wall .
  Next page