Example sentences of "[noun pl] [adv] into [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Not only is the snow cover likely to remain comfortable in the high resorts right into the start of May , but the lower the temperature , the safer the snow . |
2 | She dipped her fingers delicately into a dish and , to my astonishment , popped a morsel of food into my mouth instead of into her own . |
3 | The measures , known as CBI II , made permanent the legislation to allow certain products duty-free into the USA . |
4 | As a first step in turning out a molecule of sugar ( which has six carbon atoms in it ) they are content to link three CO2 molecules together into a proto-carbohydrate . |
5 | And this development if allowed , without a link road , will generate an additional estimated four hundred cars daily into the town centre . |
6 | He looked with half-closed eyes eastward into the wind . |
7 | ‘ Oh , who cares where it came from ! ’ screamed Mavis , as the wolf came a few steps further into the room . |
8 | Lazily , she stretched and smiled , letting her somnolent gaze drift over the procession of reeds and gnarled trees that dipped their branches low into the water . |
9 | Once the stretcher rails are together , loosely locate them in the back legs and drive the legs home into the seat and the rails into the legs . |
10 | Or drive south from Ramsey to Douglas on a road that snakes upwards into the collar of cloud that rests on the shoulders of Snaefell , the highest mountain on Man . |
11 | I am trying to free as much memory as possible by moving drivers etc into the UMB . |
12 | Amal heard loud music and voices late into the evening ; the games room was located directly below her bedroom . |
13 | All I did know was that Scamp took a few steps forward into the street while stuffing home fresh cartridges . |
14 | As Miss Fergusson explained the extent and purpose of their journey , the diplomat studied her : a dark-haired woman in early middle age , with protuberant black eyes and rather full , reddish cheeks which pushed her lips forward into a pout . |
15 | Push the fabric squares firmly into the ring so the centre is embedded in the foam by about 1 cm and the fabric corners stand up |
16 | His action only had the effect of helping to throw the Moravians too into the arms of Byzantine Christianity . |
17 | Andy is at my side but then ducks away into the throng . |
18 | Harry ran and caught him by the arm , clenching his fingers desperately into the folds of the wide velvet sleeve . |
19 | Clarke explains his mysteries right into the ground , even while making his astronomical facts blossom . |
20 | Mix all ingredients together into a dressing . |
21 | Lie on your back and lift both feet together into the air , keeping your knees straight . |
22 | Grammatical errors and grammatical variations can arise when you put words together into phrases and phrases together into a sentence . |
23 | Spoon the chocolate mixtures alternately into the tin , then swirl together with a skewer . |
24 | I eased the wheel up , drawing Wavebreaker 's bows harder into the sea and wind , and I was rewarded with another shattering of white spray that exploded prettily about our bows before I let the hull fall away once more . |
25 | Thrusting the helm right over , he held the catamaran 's bows directly into the wind and , looking aft , saw the madly waving arms of the terrified men outlined against the wall of white spray . |
26 | Even if you move the ewes and lambs straight into the lambing shed , the damp and cold will still take their toll . |
27 | Pipe horizontal and vertical lines evenly into the frame to form the latticed wired door . |
28 | He extended his talons experimentally into the grass , and then withdrew them again . |
29 | Melt the chocolate in a bowl over hot water and dip the meringues diagonally into the chocolate . |
30 | Maeve dug her nails deep into the calf of his leg . |