Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] [adv prt] into the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Its heroes do not characteristically commit suicide or ride off into the sunset : they settle down , marry , and make comfortable and elaborate treaties with the world they live in .
2 Or shovelled off into the Old Folks like me .
3 If you go to the racecourse you can bet at the course 's own betting shop or go out into the ‘ betting ring ’ where bookmakers have odds chalked up on boards .
4 If you tend to throw things , put objects away or go out into the garden .
5 Stay out here or go back into the classroom , she did n't want to be found out there if by any chance Miss Graining the Head came by .
6 Every culture , however imperfectly and blindly , either turned towards the light or fell back into the darkness .
7 Young people who have completed GCSEs at 16 can choose whether to stay on at school or college , or come out into the labour market and , possibly , take an entitlement to YT .
8 Each year straw equivalent to 3.6 million tonnes of coal is wasted , usually burnt in the field or ploughed back into the ground .
9 With damp palms he opened the door that led up into the hallway .
10 ‘ That would explain it , ’ Angelica said , pushing open the service door that led through into the kitchen .
11 Would he , seventeen years afterwards , be able to rediscover the mouth of the hole that led down into the Goughdale Mine ?
12 At the one-way door that led back into the station 's tiny foyer and reception area , she stepped aside for him and said , ‘ I hope you find her . ’
13 When she went through the door that led back into the kitchen , she found that Julius was still there .
14 It was only when she had closed the door behind her and was hurrying along the corridor that led back into the hall that she noticed the painting .
15 Instinctively , she headed for the door that led out into the garden .
16 With a whoop of pleasure Kirsty rushed across the room , heading for the door that led out into the hall .
17 And he said he was working with an old fellow which is getting on in age and he was quite absent minded and he said , I was about thirty feet from the ground on a ledge er filling er s a hole ready for shot for blasting and the old fellow was about twenty feet higher than him and then he was ss er whatsit another hole and then a at the top of the chamber there 's a little hole , he said , like a roof we call it which is a little passage that goes up into the next floor and then we used that as an escape route he did n't have to go far .
18 The boathook is planted deep in its belly , a grotesque fifth limb that rears up into the air as it turns over .
19 A heron scraiked below the steep slabs of stone that chuted down into the sea .
20 Consequently increased emphasis needs to be placed upon the role of assessment , rehabilitation and transfer rather than discharge back into the community .
21 He swallowed hard and headed for the door that opened out into the hall .
22 He then ignored both of them , walking to the stairs that curved down into the room and taking the luggage up .
23 It has a double effect : it reduces the fear in the cat itself and enables it to stay where it is , rather than move off into the distance ; it also prevents any counter-staring by the cat , which would spell defiance and possibly provoke further hostility .
24 Through Morndun she saw writhing spirits and running ghosts that drifted back into the trees as her haunting gaze fell upon them and they became aware of being watched .
25 His foot struck a cassette-player that skittered off into the darkness .
26 There were countless small libraries that ran on into the 1930s and even later , right down to the small cornershop lending libraries of the kind George Orwell worked in ( it is strange how , when you get down to the basic phenomena of literacy in England , he keeps cropping up ) .
27 Perhaps it is better , rather than roaming back into the recesses of geological time to consider the sudden and simultaneous extinctions that happened in Our geological yesterday .
28 Here the strange , tilted cliffs of the Corniche begin , layers of schist or of limestone that slide off into the water at an angle of 45 degrees and there make starkly visible ridges on the seabed .
29 It is built around a piece of land that juts out into the Atlantic , with beaches on the north side of the slender neck and the harbour on the south side .
30 Biarritz spreads amply out from its heart , at the Place Clemenceau , but its attractions lie by the sea , above all around the small , domesticated promontory that juts out into the froth and swirl of the Bay of Biscay between the Grande Plage in the centre of the town and the rather humbler Plage de la Cote tea Basques to the south .
  Next page