Example sentences of "[verb] [adv prt] into [art] [noun] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 But , nevertheless , for me eternity was not now , and I had to go on into the future and in this world .
2 Some geezer got down into the tunnels and found his way out . ’
3 The barbarian had vaulted down into the heather and had drawn the black sword , Kring .
4 What Derrida points out is that this view can creep back into the definition of the sign itself once it has been broken down into a signifier and a signified .
5 Reconsider this planned essay with the introduction broken down into the parts as suggested .
6 The tape measure had now to go down into the hollow as well as across the circle , and it was not long enough to do this .
7 My husband was mad on golf , and he used to go down into the park and send golf balls onto the lawn and then walk back through the rose garden which I put in the wrong place .
8 Agnes stood directly in front of her mother now as she said , ‘ Would it do you any harm either to go down into the shop or to go over to the house and change the linen ?
9 The Friar plunged down into the ravine and toiled up the other side .
10 Eighteen months later he moved on into the marketing and sales department , where he was responsible for liaising between Harwell and the EEC .
11 Emily sank down into a chair and studied the pages closely , controlling the urge to slap the insolent hussy 's pretty face .
12 She sank down into a chair and watched as Craig knelt before the fire , building it back into a glowing warmth .
13 When the carriage was out of sight , she sank down into a chair and put her hands over her face .
14 She peered down into the water but was aware only of her own reflection and that of the branches of the beech trees .
15 What I 'll do so is anything sucked down into the boiler or
16 Getting sucked down into the house and the house things and the babyworld and the child-world and the cooking-world and the shopping-world .
17 The grammar of English is carried over into the signing and presumably evaluation of the adequacy of BSL is based on the ease with which it can be fitted to this English format .
18 Since kitchens tend to be positioned at the back of the house , they are often in an ideal situation for extending into the back garden , or knocking through into a corridor or back room to create a more useful space .
19 On the bedside table , he was in the act of placing a Bible , so that he may have dropped off into a doze while reading it .
20 The car moved off into the darkness and the rain .
21 Connors said the guy must have curled up into a ball and hidden in a waste-basket .
22 ‘ One moment , ’ he said , climbing up into the cab and sitting in the driving seat .
23 To experience an exhilarating feeling of flight , imagine you are about to soar up into the clouds as your arms are thrust forward and backward in rhythmic motion .
24 and then I was trying to come out and I started to pull out into a gap and Brian said oh know , do n't pull out I said oh okay , he said the thing is your fairly tight so your gon na have to come out slowly so you need a bigger gap than otherwise .
25 The maid would have to be dismissed of course … the girl had brazenly admitted allowing Patrick back into the house , and Katherine was n't sure which annoyed her more — the fact that the boy had managed to creep back into the house or the fact that he had been alone in the girl 's bedroom .
26 Harrison Ford stars as a former CIA man lured back into the fray after he becomes the target of the IRA .
27 He swam back into the bay and along the coast some hundred yards before swimming in again .
28 He wandered out into the kitchen and took a pint of milk from the fridge , supping straight from the bottle .
29 Edward , offended by the detergent , wandered out into the garden and was instantly distracted by the sound of digging from beyond the yew hedge .
30 The archaeologists camped uncomfortably inside them for a while , then moved out into the townships that had mushroomed around the site .
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