Example sentences of "[v-ing] into [det] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | They were laughing into each other 's faces at some private joke ; they had n't seen me . |
2 | At Mucking ( Jones 1980 ) blocks of slag were recovered , the largest weighing 24 kilograms , produced when either waste slag or cinder was dropped into the bottom of the shaft , cooling into such blocks . |
3 | The outer circumference and walls will be more exhibition like , but can only be found by going through the tunnels opening into that segment . |
4 | ‘ Checking into that organization may take months . |
5 | In fact , unknown to the traveller , who was no more a geologist than a naturalist , he was about to step over the geological phenomenon of two prehistoric ages crunching into each other as noticeably as jagged waves hitting a large smooth stone . |
6 | Meredith hastily curbed her natural friendliness , reminding herself that she was n't at home now , gossiping to strangers and leaping into any car that came down the lane . |
7 | Try walking into that dressing-room after they had just lost by an innings . |
8 | Yeah , actually se , I sa , actually she said oh what , have you been walking into this time ? |
9 | and , well no it 's not sociable but because you come out and it , it gets you away from here because you 've got so many things on during the day you want some time to yourself and because you , we 've found us a place that we wo n't get busted and we know we wo n't we go in and have it but I can guarantee that if we were , like walking into this room , if it was full of smoke it would put me off straight away . |
10 | It is introduced as a hypothesis which can bring coherence and understanding into this area — a piece of speculation which has continued to worry empiricists ever since it was first developed since it does not seem to be based on facts . |
11 | If two vowels combine , they form a diphthong , the two shapes blending into each other in quick succession . |
12 | ‘ The fish were really distressed and could not avoid bashing into each other with the water level so low . |
13 | The root form has the ability to reproduce itself by parthenogenesis several times throughout the year for a few years without passing into another form . |
14 | A vast area of towns all spilling into each other , we must have hit something , Geilenkirchen , we were looking for oil . |
15 | However , the CNAA 's Model C would go further by uniting the functions of funding , academic planning and course validation under one body and envisages the possibility of the CNAA itself developing into that body . |
16 | Economic prosperity and satisfaction led many , perhaps , to look rather benignly upon Hallstein 's activist Commission and not to be unduly worried by the possibility of it developing into some kind of European government . |
17 | It should be remembered , however , that a lot of abseils are to be found in remote areas such as national parks , and those venturing into these areas should carry and be able to use survival equipment . |
18 | The day , the expenditure of emotion — the oyster knife he has been inserting into these women 's lives — have tired him . |
19 | The myth developing around Johnson took on an existence of its own and he became known as a hero of black folklore , fitting into that tradition of ‘ bad niggers ’ , moral hard men who were , according to Lawrence Levine , ‘ admired because they had the strength , courage and ability to flout the limitations imposed by white society ’ ( 1977 , p.420 ) . |
20 | It is difficult to see the National Curriculum requirements fitting into this sort of timetabling pattern . |
21 | Every now and again a band comes along that completely defies all attempts at fitting into any sort of neat package . |
22 | And the capability to cut Telnet network traffic by up to 90% should mean that the network can support additional traffic , translating into less competition for scarce network resources , and remote users should see their line-usage charges fall . |
23 | Or were we tapping into some kind of general biochemical mechanism relevant to all types of learning ? |
24 | Geoff Boltwood , 43 year-old psychic healer and medium , is one of a band of men and women worldwide who appear to be able to influence the outcome of disease by tapping into some force or energy which no one yet understands . |
25 | Soviet oilmen have been tapping into these supplies since the 1940s , when they created Oil Rocks , a gigantic production centre with 200 kilometres of causeway , built on concrete piles and landfill offshore . |
26 | Yes , in fact we shall be going again this week , and I have no doubt , once again this week , we , we 'll be overlapping into another bay , but er unless we use the coach car park , er which means that we could n't take children who were n't really able walkers , so in fact we would be discriminating against our own children , er I really ca n't see what else we can do . |
27 | The couples frequently face each other looking into each other 's faces and appear to crouch over their feet slightly which emphasises the ‘ down to earth ’ quality as most steps appear to go down into and not out of the ground . |
28 | They were looking into each other 's face and laughing as if , Agnes thought , they were alone . |
29 | Jasper and she stood looking into each other 's faces , alive and tingling and delighted , knowing that anyone looking at them could guess , simply from the waves of energy that danced from them . |
30 | Saint-Exupéry said that ‘ loving someone does not mean looking into each other 's eyes , but looking in the same direction together . ’ |