Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [verb] into " in BNC.
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1 | The text can be highly discursive and reads like a series of points rather randomly formed into short paragraphs . |
2 | He managed furthermore discreetly to put into circulation the audacious proposal that he should be the first Governor-General of the two independent states . |
3 | Old tattered flags hung from the ceiling , their patterns long since faded into the air . |
4 | The Williams family have been here since 1797 , when Robert Williams bought the manor of Littlebredy , which had long since degenerated into a farmhouse . |
5 | Our parents long since disappeared into the vacuum of the war . |
6 | From her bedroom window she could see the mountain rising up in a steep and slippery slope above a deep quarry , which had once been worked for limestone but had long since fallen into disuse . |
7 | When the history of the church was being researched a footnote in an 18th century volume identified a drawing of some stained-glass panels which had long since fallen into disrepair and had been replaced by plain lights . |
8 | Hassan , who was usually with him in Abu Dhabi as well as England , manoeuvred into the rear seat of the Mercedes and I took my place beside the young son who had long since graduated into a licensed driver . |
9 | In The Act of Reading , Wolfgang Iser argues that the literary work should be understood as a means of communication rather than as a representation of the world : ‘ It is a vital feature of literary texts that they do not lose their ability to communicate ; indeed , many of them can still speak even when their message has long since passed into history and their meaning no longer seems to be of importance ’ ( 1978:13 ) . |
10 | That fine piece of legislation would have long since passed into law and we would have had lots of time to spend on Opposition days , motions of censure and other matters on which we could spend our time much more effectively . |
11 | Now this yarn had long since passed into history of ancient Highland folklore , and the WAAFs and airmen could have lived happily ever after . |
12 | This species may also be under-represented in trap assemblages if the traps are set even short distances from thick vegetation , for it so rarely ventures into the open . |
13 | Fume cupboards for those working with gases and solvents only slowly came into laboratories . |
14 | were more or less successfully incorporated into political life , first by successive extensions of the suffrage and political ‘ citizenship ’ , later by the evolution of well-organized institutions of interest mediation . |
15 | There is no intention in these arguments to give any sustenance to the view that corporate officials have been so successfully socialized into the ‘ way of life ’ that they can not see what they are doing or that the organizational constraints upon them were so tight as to be ‘ coercive ’ and therefore excusing . |
16 | However , it is so much woven into the fabric of multimedia , we will not focus on interactivity in itself in this study but allow it to feature implicitly throughout our assessment of multimedia design , technology and application . |
17 | The second one was much more difficult because I had to come up with a script every couple of weeks , and there was so much crammed into each one . |
18 | As the work proceeds she/he makes tentative decisions on what to do with each title , and in doing so obviously takes into account the amount of money shortly to be used for replenishing the stock . |
19 | Having spent so long staring into the national navel we can raise our heads . |
20 | The Laboulbeniales are ectoparasites — most of their tissue remains outside the host — and only superficially penetrate into the host . |
21 | Such sweet months , so richly embroidered into earth 's beauty-dress , |
22 | He had been shocked by the resentment he had aroused — especially from a group of poets who themselves had only lately moved into the Vale : but he had dug in and dug on , he was no coward and he would not budge , he was determined to see it built , to live in it in the season and to be happy there with his wife and daughter . |
23 | Different colours , perhaps already cut into small pieces by an adult , can be sorted by teachers and children ready for collage work . |
24 | Because it 's a feminine trait that women are , on the whole , far erm less easily aroused into combat . |
25 | He said : ‘ The turntable ladder only just fitted into the churchyard by a few inches . |
26 | The Sheikh was only just getting into his stride . |
27 | I think that they are only just getting into their stride on this particular issue , because some years ago we had flooding in Worthing , quite severe flooding , so every application went to the Southern Water Authority and we never got back no , you ca n't develop on that area and it was , it was very difficult . |
28 | Strongly independent all his life , John Granger did n't let blindness change his lifestyle , and although now in his nineties has only just moved into a sheltered flat in Oxford . |
29 | The hon. Member for Southampton , Test ( Mr. Hill ) has only just ambled into the Chamber . |
30 | Anthea has only just stepped into Yvette 's shoes but has already made pals with the other presenters and , course , Bonnie the dog . |