Example sentences of "[verb] [adv prt] into the " in BNC.
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1 | The oral tradition lived on into the nineteenth and twentieth centuries . |
2 | And it goes out in a blaze of colour — a spectacular firework display which starts at 6.45pm and goes on into the night . |
3 | Straight , clean-cut stone walls and a steady slabbed roof led on into the hill . |
4 | The blade plunged on into the heather at the side of the track . |
5 | Viola was beaming benevolently as she read on into the last column . |
6 | I waved to him and passed on into the lecture room . ’ |
7 | But , nevertheless , for me eternity was not now , and I had to go on into the future and in this world . |
8 | This includes considerable inspection work , firstly to establish what grinding needs to be done , and then to ensure that the body is fit , after they have completed their welding and grinding , to go on into the paint shop . |
9 | Such arguments over values , political or religious , were to go on into the next decade . |
10 | In a hundred years ' time a solitary figure might well be seen on a lonely road gazing down into the valley , wondering about ‘ Little Hintock ’ . |
11 | In another mood , while gazing down into the vapour one could imagine the turbulent creation of the Earth with the alpha tracks like mountain ranges constantly forming , disappearing and reforming . |
12 | For Jack , time seemed to stand still as he sat at his stepfather 's bedside , gazing down into the inanimate features and waiting for a miracle . |
13 | She did not want to look at him , and crossed to stand before the mantel over the fireplace , gazing down into the empty grate . |
14 | At the end of the gallery the girl halted , gazing down into the hall through one of the archways cut into the wall . |
15 | He loped down into the basement , dusted off half a dozen bottles of beer and brought them up , found glasses and an opener and took them into the living-room on a tray . |
16 | Some geezer got down into the tunnels and found his way out . ’ |
17 | She got down into the hall . |
18 | But when she had washed her hair and dressed in a new pair of designer jeans and a silk shirt that had been a Christmas present and which she 'd never worn before — it was n't to Eva 's house that she went but back down into the town , towards the theatre and the Franz Joseph . |
19 | Slowly , inch by inch , the three men advanced the half mile across no-man's-land , towards the Allied front line , pressing their faces back down into the mud whenever the moon reappeared from behind its unreliable screen . |
20 | Sleek towers that were telescoping down into the undercity , leaving great smooth plazas where they had previously reared , chequerboard-patterned spaces with a hint of roof outlines . |
21 | Leaving the grassland behind , the terrain became more barren with cliffs and rocks tumbling down into the sea . |
22 | Louise cried out as she felt her body tumbling down into the blackness . |
23 | It takes them long enough to cut a way through to the chimney of the air shaft , sawing through the rhodie branches and tearing away the brambles and other undergrowth ; then they lever off the iron grating over the shaft without any difficulty , and one of the younger cops , in an overall and a hard hat , wraps the rope around himself — proper climbing rope they had in the back of one of the Range Rovers — and abseils down into the darkness . |
24 | The barbarian had vaulted down into the heather and had drawn the black sword , Kring . |
25 | Broken down into the different crops , the figures put soft wheat at 75.68m tonnes ( compared with 72.9m tonnes last year ) , followed by barley , 44.6m tonnes ( 45.7m ) ; maize , 27.4m tonnes ( 22m ) ; durum , 9.3m tonnes ( 7.1m ) ; rye , 3.1m tonnes ( 3.3m ) ; oats , 4.4m tonnes ( 4.6m ) ; sorghum , 0.51m tonnes ( 0.45m ) ; and triticale 1.5m tonnes ( 1.1m ) . |
26 | Words themselves can be broken down into the minimal grammatical units known as MORPHEMES ( stems and affixes ) . |
27 | Reconsider this planned essay with the introduction broken down into the parts as suggested . |
28 | A possible framework for comprehensive assessment is offered through the concepts of quality of life and risk : two related , multidimensional concepts which can be translated into statements of purpose and scope as well as broken down into the factors which constitute quality of life and risk . |
29 | LIFESPAN RDBI data transfers can be broken down into the following phases : |
30 | Er and that showed er in fact when we reported to members in July of this year , we were seeking from them er an indication as to the priority of the phasing because prior to that and in fact it 's reflected in the structure plan , we simply have a a scheme for A fifty nine , A sixty one relief roads , they 're not broken down into the two schemes . |