Example sentences of "[verb] [vb pp] back into " in BNC.
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1 | During the seven and a half months I was on C1 I went to Crown Court twice , and each time I got remanded back into Holloway . |
2 | In the 5 years with Maxwell junior at the helm , the club has dropped back into the second division and shows debts of up to £4.5 million . |
3 | Donovan , the folk guru who was a git in the Sixties with grooves such as ‘ Goo Goo Barabajagal ’ and ‘ Mellow Yellow ’ , has come back into vogue . |
4 | BBC2 's recent Rembrandt season confirms that the figure of the artist has come back into fashion . |
5 | That she has come back into our world again : |
6 | On T V last week there was a programme , tuberculosis has come back into Britain , said it was the Asians bringing it back . |
7 | It says , that not only does it save it 's money when it comes to when we 're putting in the tender bids , but actually the profits it makes goes back into the County Council , it has a two- prong saving of averages to this council , and we 've known and seen in the years that it 's been running that money has come back into county council balances , which means that we can have more money to spend on other services . |
8 | THE discos and snooker halls group , European Leisure , currently embroiled in a Serious Fraud Office investigation , has moved back into the black in its first half-year to 31 December . |
9 | ‘ Yup , ’ she 'd said , shifting down to fourth as a car she 'd been waiting to pass pulled back into the slow lane . |
10 | In her latest novel , Jazz , Toni Morrison has dipped back into a time before cross-over , when African-American music was all-black , in her quest for a uniquely black literary language . |
11 | Scottish Homes has brought back into use 1,000 units that it has helped to create in the past two years . |
12 | To crown it all , I now read in my newspaper that we are living in ‘ the post-feminist era ’ which I take to mean either that the battle is won — a view informed by the same kind of stupidity which once encouraged Macmillan to proclaim ‘ we 're all middle-class now ’ — or that feminism is a spent force and has slipped back into obscurity for another sixty years of oblivion . |
13 | They all cackle with pleasure at the absurdity of it ; then , as soon as Harry has gone back into his room , they all mock him , walking back and forth about the room holding imaginary braces and letter , and talking with a German accent . |
14 | But one can still go to Shardlow , which has sunk back into obscurity , and see the tall warehouses , the wharves , and the later Georgian Shardlow Hall where the prosperous James Sutton lived , and all the other evidences of a place that was virtually created by the canal age . |
15 | HARMONY Leisure , the pubs and hotels group where former GrandMet chairman Sir Stanley Grinstead is to join the board , has bounced back into the black . |
16 | She 'd gone back into the house to fetch something and his Dad was all ready in the car waiting to drive Uncle Walter back to his house . |
17 | He 'd gone back into the hotel , trying to act casually , and had hovered in reception looking at the magazines in the hardcovers , watching the man explaining to the people in the hut and coming back inside , which confirmed Cormack 's suspicions . |
18 | Bewildered , she felt as if she 'd stepped back into a dark cave and was falling into the unknown . |
19 | Sometimes I imagined that he 'd sneaked back into the country and was leading another life . |
20 | ‘ Individually a few have done , ’ said his new colleague Sarah , ‘ but they get squeezed back into line by the West . ’ |
21 | Nevertheless Stavrogin does contemplate suicide , and the notebook entry ‘ to be or not to be ’ bears the date 16 August , so it belongs to the summer when the ‘ tendentious ’ political story gets tugged back into great-sinner orbit , growing physically and imaginatively larger and more formidable all the time . |
22 | The implementation process throws light on the strengths and weaknesses of a policy , and experience at the implementation end ( by junior officials and the public ) gets fed back into the policy process to influence future policy change . |
23 | In the case of Caloris some of the ejecta from the impact would have fallen back into the basin because of the fairly high surface gravity . |
24 | Had it not been for another round of cost cutting , the group would have crept back into the black last year . |
25 | Then the sound of the bells faded and , like water suddenly released from a dam , vigour and brawl and bustle flooded back into the scene . |
26 | Moreover , if they were to break through within the established system then they just might be a little less enthusiastic about introducing proportional representation as " a first priority " since it could let one of the parties they would have displaced back into the game . |
27 | ‘ Miers could not take the German prisoners on board his sub , and if he had left them to paddle ashore they would immediately have gone back into the German forces … |
28 | In fact once inside the Park , one had the definite impression of having stepped back into the past . |
29 | By that time , the footballers of Halifax Town may have climbed back into the big league . |
30 | Pallister recovered from early setbacks when he could so easily have drifted back into Northern League football . |