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

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1 ‘ They said his name was Simon so I punched it into the computer and went through the alphabet for burglars .
2 The Clwydian Hills , rising to the south and cloaked in cloud , looked wonderfully alluring : so I threw myself into the long climb with far more vigour than I might have done normally .
3 They rattled as she stalked , sometimes alarming her prey , and so she scattered them into the sand , to be ingested by the things that lived below the dunes .
4 So she helped them into the boat and they embraced one another .
5 Together we assisted him into the taxi .
6 Thoughtfully he thrust it into the base of a bush a few feet from the path and covered it with dried leaves .
7 Eliot had arranged with me beforehand that we should have a private meeting , and meanwhile I sank myself into the communal life of the place .
8 They 'll take days to dry , so the sooner you get them into the sun the better .
9 I 'll bet she thinks that directly she lets me into the A.R.R.U. I 'll do a Charlie Peters !
10 Now I took him into my home , it was an extremely costly thing to do , and eventually we got him into the Chiltern Clinic .
11 Ca n't you plug it into the stereo ?
12 Ten years ago they formed themselves into the Hargeisa Group to lobby the government for a better deal for the north .
13 I expect I did , but I never know , I 'm so afraid of losing things that sometimes I take them into the most unsuitable places .
14 I 've already told you how I threw them into the river . ’
15 ‘ It was probably hit on the road and then somebody threw it into the lake , ’ Ross Aldridge , the young constable , told her .
16 You go to the pantry , get on your hands then you take it into the dining room
17 And then you pour it into the bowls
18 Then she injects them into the nostrils of an unfortunate sheep where they quickly start feeding on the membranes lining their host 's sinuses .
19 She was reluctant to let go of the roach at first but then she hurled it into the fire and got unsteadily to her feet , saying , ‘ I know what . ’
20 well so that 's how it 's pleaded and that 's how we built it into the , these cases which I was referring to where an agreement is the object or the , the means or the consequence of an agreement , they enforce within five , the action is unlawful and of course there 's the final and fourth way in which it could be devoured this , because it , and again quoting the words from the cases , tends to have restricted affect on the market , I think your Lordship you can see how we pleaded it in paragraph two , two , three , it 's enforcing the consequence of the unlawful underline previous .
21 If anyone did maybe they threw themselves into the Aire after leaving the ground ; - )
22 Then it formed itself into the semblance of a frown , the whole countenance becoming stern , implacable .
23 Then he lowered himself into the driving seat , slowly and painfully , and pulled the door shut .
24 ‘ But then he got her into the trouble in the first place .
25 Then he pushed her into the bathroom and locked the door .
26 Then he threw her into the basin …
27 There he flung himself into the local setting with characteristic abandon and commitment , participating in the daily round of village life with an eagerness and zest which he attributed partly to his Polish temperament ; there he established standards of meticulous and painstaking observation and inquiry which have been an inspiration to social anthropologists ever since .
28 There was no one about when she let herself into the house , and thankfully she went quietly up to her room .
29 Morton Pitt added rooms on the south elevation in 1823 when he converted it into the ROYAL VICTORIA HOTEL .
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