Example sentences of "[det] [noun] [adv] [verb] into " in BNC.
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1 | The British monarchy , and the survival of aristocratic titles dating back to the Norman conquest lend a spurious sense of continuity to English history ( if not to that of the other countries in the UK ) , suggesting that feudalism imperceptibly evolved into modern capitalist democracy . |
2 | In coeliac disease , patients with abnormal histology have increased intensity of epithelial staining which in some cases now extended into the crypts . |
3 | This cottage gradually grew into a station , and this station brought prosperity to the land around it . |
4 | Mr Byrne visited Amiens , which is twinned with Darlington , a few months ago to look into the possibility of setting up a link . |
5 | This opposition eventually developed into the Resources Protection Campaign . |
6 | This separation actually continued into this century , and was only totally eradicated with the upsurge in witchcraft in the late fifties and early sixties . |
7 | Much has been written about the ‘ new technology ’ methods currently being introduced throughout the newspaper and magazine industry but few individuals ever come into actual contact with the equipment and working methods they use , we merely read the end results at our breakfast table . |
8 | This legend rapidly evolved into that of the ‘ Angels of Mons ’ , under the influence of Arthur Machen 's story , ‘ The Bowmen ’ , which appeared in The Evening News at the end of September 1914 ; the bowmen were the bowmen of Agincourt , led by St George of England . |
9 | And if this water then comes into contact with air from a cave passage it releases some of the carbon dioxide gas contained within it . |
10 | This paper accordingly falls into two not wholly unconnected parts — one philosophical , the other biological . |
11 | In recent years the popularity of the computer has soared , few people never come into close contact with computers , but a surprisingly small number use them to their full potential . |
12 | It is also a fact that very few people actually come into the Christian faith with a deep burden of sin . |
13 | This debate easily tumbles into a narrow institutional and constitutional approach to power and politics . |
14 | This crane actually came into use in January 1969 . |
15 | A human mind dulled by its own self-absorption may fail to perceive this , but in stillness , this awareness automatically comes into our consciousness , without any effort of intellect or will . |
16 | He strummed for a few seconds then broke into a sweet-sounding madrigal known to both my master and myself . |
17 | But this tone soon dissolves into a miasma of melancholy . |
18 | He rejects parliamentarianism and hates the nation-state , saying that this system merely takes into account people 's interests but not their needs . |
19 | This scheme effectively came into existence in Baldwin 's second administration with the formation of the Central Electricity Generating Board in 1926 . |
20 | She waited a few moments then turned into East 48th Street , still pretending to look in the shop windows as she walked . |
21 | However , this view soon runs into difficulties . |
22 | The few miles between bring into view other arresting features of a fantastic skyline which bristles with Munros in the shape of abrupt towers of rock poised above precipitous cliffs and deep corries . |
23 | On Merseyside the ore at some stage probably entered into that unexpected and unusual relationship which existed between the soda , salt , glass , soap , and chemical industries . |
24 | Only he left the Ministry some time ago to go into politics . ’ |
25 | That lady successfully went into a glass-fronted lift the next week armed with instructions on relaxation , deep breathing , and an index card with positive self-statements in her pocket . |
26 | It is clear that the skin of each pillow must originally have been fairly flexible , since the base of each pillow characteristically sags into the gap between the ones below it . |
27 | Such bombs often smash into other bigger , stationary boulders at the base of the cone , shattering into smithereens , but in doing so they leave their own mark on the boulder . |
28 | Fathers who tell their boys that they will be engineers may be delighted with their success rate , at least initially ( many such sons subsequently flood into business schools to get out of engineering ) . |
29 | Indeed this is so clear that I sometimes wonder why so much effort usually goes into attempting to prove it . |
30 | At that moment there came into my mind the image of that little guy with a moustache and I thought , dammit . |