Example sentences of "into it " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | They are passive , we are told ; moral scruples do n't come into it . |
2 | They could not be let into it , but there was a duty to entertain them , and , as I was told , not to stare . |
3 | The reason destroying it now would be no solution , he wrote , is that what sickens me is not the object itself but the time and thought I have put into it . |
4 | But rather that the time and thought put into it had somehow polluted me . |
5 | Poor overweight Peter Horbury , the new Lord Woodleigh began to heave himself from his deckchair and then sank back into it . |
6 | If there is a possible area for a safe landing , use the brakes and get down into it . |
7 | Check for any areas of hazard such as pillars , radiators , chairs or competitors ' bags near the area — anything , in fact , that might cause you injury if you ploughed into it at speed . |
8 | Do note that the extension is not a new bout , and any penalties incurred in the original bout are carried forwards into it . |
9 | Either of these faults means that the attacking technique is well developed before you move into it , and so your front barring arm or groin suffer accordingly . |
10 | We are deep into it now , and there is no avoiding it . |
11 | ( There had been no plan to illustrate the book , but Leonard talked his friend and fellow-student Freda Guttman into it , and so the book appeared with five designs from her hand ) . |
12 | She took her oilskin from the hook on the back door , buttoned herself into it and stepped out , still undetected . |
13 | When , for example , a subject fitted with scalp electrodes over the auditory cortex is played a series of brief clicks through headphones and the EEG following each click is averaged so that random fluctuations cancel each other out , what is left is a systematic but complex pattern of electrical waves which is caused by the click in the same way that the waves on the surface of a pond are caused by dropping a pebble into it . |
14 | This time there was no froth to fold into it . |
15 | And she went into it out of real idealism , not just as an ego trip to prove oneself to one 's dead father — ’ |
16 | If he uses the ruler to transfer a measurement from one piece of his work to another then they are going to be identical ; accuracy of the ruler does n't come into it . |
17 | When applying a varnish , the brush should be dipped into it for about one-third of the length of the bristles and then , holding the brush in a similar way to a pencil , with the fingers holding the metal ferrule and the handle resting between the thumb and first finger , spread the varnish quickly and evenly over a small area . |
18 | The co-producer is Russell 's wife , Annie , who has long considered Stags And Hens a suitable vehicle for a film : ‘ I badgered Willy into it ’ . |
19 | A central pay zone was marked out with huge signs and , during the morning peak , drivers were obliged to pay US$26 ( £16 ) per month and US$1.30 per day to drive into it . |
20 | The only answer is to spread the people and the jobs thinner — so that fewer travellers , bringing their cars and their litter - journey into it or through it . |
21 | ‘ Sometimes they do n't answer at all unless nagged into it . ’ |
22 | In just three weeks , the Supreme Soviet has become a real parliament , in the sense that every problem of national life feeds into it . |
23 | Eels come into it somehow , but not in a way that can be described in a family newspaper . |
24 | Neither the price nor any other characteristic of the transport system enters into it . |
25 | She was taken back into the house and made to fill a bath and to get into it . |
26 | We are in an orchard with a sunken road leading into it from the main road . |
27 | The results of this brief comparison may surprise those Whig interpreters of Soviet history who read back into it before its time the dominant Great-Russian nationalism of the 1930s . |
28 | To put teeth into it , Pomgol was chaired by M. I. Kalinin , who was to become president of the newly formed USSR in December 1922 . |
29 | Like all sports , when you get keen and decide to sail all year round , including the March ‘ Frostbite ’ Racing series , you will need some good kit — preferably wet or drysuit clothing — but there is not need to rush into it . |
30 | Into it comes the shamanic figure of ‘ An Unidentified Guest ’ who is in control of potent and primitive forces , which the other characters do not seem to understand . |