Example sentences of "into [noun sg] the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He had all three and felt that at last the play was under way : this was why he had struck north ; this was why he had learned his part ( and God bless Major General Lake of Dumfries and God keep him there ) ; this was his great opportunity and ‘ O Lord , ’ he prayed to himself , ‘ if it is true that You have love even for the worst of Your sinners and let Your Son welcome into Paradise the thief on the cross who by a single act redeemed a life of evil , then remember me at Hause Point , remember how I tried to obey Your will and how I saved that innocent young girl and help me here because I swear , if I succeed in my intention here , I will lead a life of charity and Christian duty to the end .
2 So came into existence the ‘ Harborough Arm ’ a branch that should have been a main line .
3 God continued the inexorable course of his divine love , and again from that immeasurable passion spoke the word of creation and out of nothing called into existence the material universe .
4 The fact that the lane runs so wide and straight also tells us that when it came into existence the open arable fields of Barton and Wootton did not yet extend so far .
5 Into that stream of pure gothic fiction there was eventually added the element of crime or suspected crime , thus bringing into existence the romantic suspense novel .
6 On June 21 the congress formally voted into existence the Communist Party of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic .
7 ‘ No simple creatures of legend for Tallis Keeton — while the rest of us engender Robin Hoods and Green Jacks and golden-tressed princesses , you bring into existence the living earth .
8 It would seem that they are the molecules responsible for maintaining the harmonious , smooth running of the body 's many functions , stimulating the release of hormones when required , organizing healing and repair and bringing into play the complex workings of the immune system .
9 New tees lurked in the trees on several holes , and were skilfully placed to bring into play the same hazards which threatened the club players from their tees .
10 The remainder of this book will explore the major phases in this development , while attempting to bring into play the schema suggested above .
11 The jaw muscles turn out to have been placed to generate the most powerful bite possible , especially when Diatryma brought into play the powerful downwards hingeing action of the upper beak on the skull .
12 Expansion to north Italy brought into play the gold of the Val d'Aosta and south Piedmont , but it was the Second Punic War ( 218–201 B.C. ) which first increased the supply of gold significantly by taking in the alluvial deposits of the Guadalquivir .
13 This brings into play the logical faculties of discrimination and selection which assimilate perceptual stimuli to previously encountered images on the basis of structural analogy .
14 Both bring into play the Easter office and order for the Mass on Good Friday where Christ is given words of reproach based on texts from Lamentations , Jeremias and Micheas ( Micah ) to stress the contrast between God 's goodness to his people under the old covenant and their crucifixion of his Son .
15 His stiff pose throws into contrast the dance-like arrangement of Bowler 's limbs .
16 The new prosperity of ‘ industrious ’ Catalonia and ‘ opulent ’ Valencia threw into contrast the industrial decline that had left central Spain a backwater of artisan industry .
17 Luke grinned , throwing into contrast the tiny creases round his mouth , and at the corners of his eyes .
18 But as the day lengthened into afternoon the argument lurched back and forth inside Isabel 's head until she could no longer think straight .
19 Again , when the Irishman Scotus Eriugena , one of the two finest minds of the ninth century ( the other was Gottschalk , close student of Augustine 's works and initiator of the controversy on predestination ) , translated from Greek into Latin the Heavenly Hierarchy of Pseudo-Denis ( c .860 ) , he might at first sight have been engaged in something purely academic .
20 The episode threw into chaos the normal wage bargaining consultations and only after several months of discussions was a new system of work organisation finally thrashed out .
21 Last week , the government introduced into parliament the world Heritage Properties Conservation Bill , specifically aimed at stopping work on the dam .
22 If you stayed into watch the FA cup final on Saturday … you were in for a disappointment .
23 It was reported on Oct. 29 that Ariane 44-L had successfully launched into orbit the Intelsat VI communications satellite for the 110-member International Telecommunications Satellite Organization ( INTELSAT ) .
24 Once you come into contact with the other side you can drop down into command the individual tanks and engage in fast armoured conflict — the controls here do take some getting used to , although you can opt to assign either the driving or firing to the computer .
25 He managed furthermore discreetly to put into circulation the audacious proposal that he should be the first Governor-General of the two independent states .
26 It is one of my favourite films — Peter Sellers as the vicar who tries to put into practice the teachings of Jesus Christ , causing anarchy and chaos thereby .
27 She had unconsciously put into practice the Winnie the Pooh principle , which rules that the most effective method of searching for a lost person or object is to get lost oneself on the assumption that some force of nature brings all forgotten things together in ignored niches and unfrequented locales .
28 We will press them to put into practice the principles of the Maastricht declaration .
29 It is as if Sukenick were putting into practice the principles of what he has called the ‘ architectonic novel ’ which ( and he cites Raymond Federman 's Double or Nothing as a prime example ) works like a jigsaw puzzle : ‘ the picture is filled out but there is no sense of development involved ’ ( Federman 1975 : 38 ) .
30 When we turn from LETTERS to Sabbatical ( 1982 ) , the latter seems almost to have been written to put into practice the theoretical position laid down in ‘ The Literature of Replenishment ’ .
  Next page