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

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1 A criticism made by those in both parties who were opposed to the appointment was that on Mr Harold Macmillan 's prompting the Queen had allowed herself to be urged prematurely into a decision without having at her disposal all the available evidence about feeling in the Conservative Party .
2 Nowadays appreciations are often condensed , perhaps into a catalogue introduction , or possibly fitted into the preface for a book of illustrations .
3 Once hired , he might have to work a 15-hour stretch , perhaps into the night .
4 As she expected the children had vanished perhaps into the trees .
5 Could we just turn it a bit perhaps into the side ?
6 He then attacked a third which went down in a vertical dive , apparently into the sea .
7 She felt as if her own emotions had been tossed brutally into a whirlwind .
8 Bishop Rathier of Verona wrote in the 930s that the church was one in all its bishops ; that not Jerusalem , not Rome , not Alexandria , had received a special prerogative of rule to the exclusion of others ( he tucks Rome pointedly into the middle ) .
9 There were worries that the combined Austin Rover/Ford operation would develop merely into an assembly plant for cars designed abroad .
10 When you tip the seed from the packet it is hard to believe that from almost every one a plant will arise , so do not let them fall too thickly into the soil .
11 ‘ Get the hell off this phone , Radcliffe ! ’ he shouted thickly into the receiver .
12 Without turning up the light Katherine crossed to stand beside the window , leaving Michael Lee to close the door and move gingerly into the centre of the room .
13 WE WERE in Prague and then Bratislava for British Film Week , organised months ago by the British Council , but now thrust inadvertently into the middle of a political , social and cultural revolution .
14 She even slips inadvertently into the chair 's mode , calling Gwynneth Dunwoody ‘ the Honourable Lady ’ , not ‘ my Honourable friend ’ .
15 The front of the raft would rise alarmingly into the air then dip down as the stern followed over the crest of the wave .
16 Having looked gloomily into the windows of antique shops , and steered his way past lines of tipsy Tories , he returned to the Grand where a functionary manning the door noticed that he was not wearing a photo-pass .
17 The tendency to translate English passive structures literally into a variety of target languages which either have no passive voice as such or which would normally use it with less frequency is often criticized by linguists and by those involved in training translators .
18 Conforming to Genette 's definition , the target is a specific pre-existent text incorporated literally into the parody ( though in this case the original is ‘ vulgar ’ not ‘ noble ’ ) .
19 A word is not a category at all in the sense used : since a text may be decomposed entirely into a sequence of words , there is no linguistic sense in which one could choose to use something else instead of a word .
20 A couple of years of university so familiarises us with this idea that literature dissolves entirely into the drudgery of reading and writing crit .
21 There was worse to come just minutes later , when striker , Dave Mitchell , who 'd already been booked , charged carelessly into a tackle .
22 He threw the handkerchief carelessly into a laundry basket , then before she knew what was happening , he was kissing the tips of her fingers , then her palms , then drawing her hands towards him so that she had little choice but to slide her arms around him and receive his kiss .
23 The perspective of the poem follows its language , tumbling suddenly into a burst of passion and emotion as the poet struggles to observe the forces that buffet him in the heart of his mind .
24 When you stop a diet is it because you plan to , or do you go suddenly into a binge ?
25 Many have a dread of something happening that will plunge them suddenly into a situation of near-poverty , and a few also unconsciously use their financial problems as pegs on which to hang their much deeper fears concerning their health and their future , which they may find hard to face .
26 Pelicans flew about swooping suddenly into the water to dive for fish .
27 One morning , while driving through the Old City , he turned quite suddenly into the Meena Bazaar near the Jama Masjid .
28 Then suddenly into the picture came a woman Patrick clearly loved enough to marry .
29 I came suddenly into the laboratory from the garden .
30 She sipped her tea and looked so long and thoughtfully into the fire that Carrie began to think she had forgotten her .
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