Example sentences of "they [verb] [adv] into " in BNC.

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1 For a long moment they gazed silently into each other 's eyes , and she felt the familiar tug of longing deep in her stomach .
2 Tendrils from the two black shapes reached out to entwine with each other , pulling their cores closer together until , as Ace watched in amazement , they melded together into a single muscular column of flesh crowned with thorns .
3 The missions became deadly games of cat and mouse as they penetrated further into DEEP territory .
4 Ultimately they contract further into molecular structures , into great dark swirling spheres that form the basis of young star-field systems .
5 Sophisticated higher-level procedures must prune these perfect , accidental word matches before they combine exponentially into a huge space of alternative partial interpretations .
6 They may seem a lot , but in fact they fit easily into a single bag .
7 These generally refer to finding a self-indexing function for tables in main storage ; Jaeschke has developed a method originally proposed by Cichell , and he has shown that , however complicated the key sequence is , a self-indexing function can be found for up to 40 keys so that they fit exactly into a table with the same number of storage positions .
8 Our first aim , therefore , is to isolate significant typical events and units of social life and activity , and then to probe for the underlying blueprint , often implicit rather than explicit , that will show how they fit together into a meaningful pattern .
9 The majority of farm servants stayed only the one year with their master after the annual hiring , but they moved only into the service of other farmers drawing labour from the same hiring fair .
10 We began to tire of eating charred meat outside in the garden and , instead of the normal seasonal rise in pig prices , they moved sharply into reverse .
11 As they rose upwards into the damp air the site spread out before them on either side .
12 As they drew away into the darkness , Joshua Cohen stood and looked after them .
13 But as they drew deeper into the coppice , moving farther east all the while , she began to fear they would leave her entirely behind .
14 They charged straight into the hall , leaving muddy trails from their shoes all across the new sports hall floor and , using their bags as improvised seating , proceeded to sit down still wrapped in their coats .
15 Reluctantly they headed away into the darkness and made the rendezvous rather late , but luckily the patrol had waited for them .
16 They slip easily into their routine .
17 You may also see otters , or their pug marks , where they slip quietly into the loch , keeping Strathbeg trout alert and fit .
18 They wandered slowly into the study and sat down .
19 They sank immediately into deep sleep .
20 ‘ Toff indeed , ’ they heard Biff mutter as they filed past into the mill .
21 ‘ Come and look at the fireplaces , ’ said William , and they filed dutifully into the room Tess had just come out of .
22 Then they exploded noisily into the air right in front of you , wheeled round in great , sweeping circles , crying their alarm calls , and settled again when you had passed .
23 The second and third generations ( the generations of my informants ) have not simply reproduced the class stratification of the Caribbean region , nor have they merged seamlessly into the already existing class strata of British society .
24 Now Tess , ’ he said anxiously , as they drove away into the night , ‘ your heart belongs to me .
25 In a perverse way , losing their best player lifted the ‘ Stiffs ’ and they came more into the game , although Micky Deere and Terry Wade were both booked for negative play .
26 As they strolled deeper into the gardens she became aware that the Pantominteatret was by no means the only form of free entertainment , as their progress led them from one area of performance to another .
27 Creggan could not turn fast enough to catch them before they dropped untidily into the safety of the trees below .
28 They drop weightily into the boat .
29 They stand accused of two sins : first , that they intrude unreasonably into people 's private lives ; second , that they are unacceptably biased and pursue that bias with scant regard for the truth .
30 For a moment they look straight into each other 's eyes .
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