Example sentences of "[noun pl] [be] [verb] [adv prt] into the " in BNC.

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1 The warders and the trusties from Internal Order are at the doors of the huts , and the zeks are pitched out into the night darkness and spill to the perimeter path , and like an ant trail they wind around the compound for what is classified as Exercise .
2 Practising kung fu puts a person in touch with himself or herself ; his or her own failings are brought out into the open .
3 Between the channels , all of which will be ‘ swept ’ in the direction of flow , the chamber is built up with concrete benching so that any splashes are directed back into the channels .
4 Richard and a few followers escaped downstream to Geoffrey de Rancon 's castle at Taillebourg while the bulk of his troops were driven back into the cathedral , where they held out for a few days .
5 Genetic experimentation remains the most popular theory , but though Hopkins has plenty of wild stories about artificial insemination , or half-breed alien/human babies already in existence ( all strictly off the record of course ) all he 's prepared to say is that things are coming out into the open .
6 The old memories were stuffed back into the dark , locked cupboard at the very back of her mind , where she kept them safely shut away .
7 Three years ago they went through a ‘ cultural revolution ’ like Mao 's in China : Personnel apparatchiks were sent out into the field to become generalists , with only dotted lines back to their personnel masters .
8 Shield-hung hurdles were brought out into the field , and bowmen and slingshot-throwers behind them began to shred the trees with a descending curtain of missiles .
9 What has to be opened up is the unsupervised way in which internationally and nationally the sum of all our communications is sucked up into the electronic vacuum cleaner that is Cheltenham
10 The chronology of geomagnetic reversals was extended back into the Mesozoic and this together with the dating of ocean floor sediments enabled the age of large areas of oceanic crust to be determined .
11 Bye-laws 17 , 18 and 22 deal with back-siphoning : wherever a cold water supply is connected to a flexible hose , the law insists that the tap or outlet is fitted with a non-return valve to prevent contaminating liquids being sucked back into the mains system by any fall in pressure .
12 Portuguese protests seem to have crushed an attempt by two Englishmen , possibly with Spanish support , to secure a foothold in the Guinea trade , and around the same time , in 1480 and 1481 , Bristol ships were exploring out into the Atlantic in search of the ‘ Isle of Brasil ’ ( 45 , pp.19–23 , 187–9 ) .
13 In one particularly telling scene between Kathie and her mother Nell ( Brenda de Banzie ) , the issues of sexual relations between Black and White people , and ‘ mixed race ’ children are brought out into the open .
14 If this process went on unchecked it should lead to an increasing ripple height , but , as the ripple crests rise , they increasingly interfere with the wind , so that the sand grains on the crests are blown over into the troughs .
15 The application was duly made , the proceedings were brought up into the High Court , and on 27 January 1992 the Official Solicitor was appointed guardian ad litem of the four children who , together with the mother and the local authority , were respondents to the foster mother 's application .
16 They said whole fields were ripped up into the air !
17 The travellers were heading out into the empty desert .
18 Then in winter the wicker table and chairs are moved back into the house , to be replaced by an old formica kitchen table .
19 Furthermore , if documents of transfer for certain assets are executed outside the United Kingdom stamp duty will not be payable until the documents are brought back into the United Kingdom .
20 Fumes were driven back into the passenger area , leaving the passengers choking .
21 Already the warriors were climbing back into the saddle .
22 Even the sooty thatch from the houses was ploughed back into the land .
23 Their eye-sockets have no bony floor , so when they blink , the eye-balls are drawn down into the skull and make a bulge in the roof of the mouth which squeezes the lump of food to the back of the throat .
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