Example sentences of "up into [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Presumably the case for streaming gets stronger as you get higher up into a school ? |
2 | Obsidian is erupted quietly as lava , forming thick , sluggish flows , while pumice is blasted out rapidly and blown up into a consistency something like expanded polystyrene , with a delicate cellular structure that results from the expansion of large volumes of gas within the magma . |
3 | It is fun to practise pulling up into a climb and trying to establish an accurate , low-speed , steep turn . |
4 | A hedgehog tries to climb up the net and when it hears you approach it promptly rolls up into a ball . |
5 | Willie crawled under the bed and curled up into a ball . |
6 | He curled his body up into a ball , presenting the smallest possible target . |
7 | I rolled it up into a ball and pushed the shawl and lipstick inside the bundle , then I went to put it on Sally 's step . |
8 | The gang pounced on him and knocked him to the ground — but he curled up into a ball to save himself as punches and kicks rained down . |
9 | Groaning , Tommy curled himself up into a ball , his hands covering his head . |
10 | Here we can see the paired jointed legs that are attached to each body segment , the feathery gill on a stalk alongside each leg , two feelers at the front of the head , the gut running the entire length of the body , even the muscle fibres along the back which enabled the animal to roll itself up into a ball . |
11 | One common kind is the pill woodlouse ( Armadillidium ) which is easily identified by its habit of rolling up into a ball when it is touched . |
12 | Connors said the guy must have curled up into a ball and hidden in a waste-basket . |
13 | There it has a store of food and a nest of grass and other materials in which it curls up into a ball , tucking in extremities . |
14 | Sara carefully separated her gloves which she had rolled up into a ball . |
15 | Pike was curled up into a ball , like a hedgehog , clutching his wig to him the way a kid might hold on to its teddy before going to sleep . |
16 | The expression on his face had grown hard and grim as he 'd scanned the paper in his hands , before angrily crunching it up into a ball and hurling it into a nearby waste-paper basket . |
17 | I must admit they 're lovely to cuddle because they do curl up into a ball . |
18 | It looks like boiling up into a battle in the athletics bullring between Christie , Burrell and fellow American Dennis Mitchell , plus Namibia 's Frankie Fredericks . |
19 | The grass in the middle had been ploughed up into a dustbowl , and here and there pools of dark blood showed where bodies thrown out had lain before being taken away to hospital . |
20 | Eventually I threw up into a litter bin attached to a crowded bus shelter on St George 's Road . |
21 | The circulating system wanders a little closer , deepens , is classified under a new title — a moderate tropical storm — and is given a name , Agnes perhaps , or Bob , an innocent , unassuming , rather cosy , old-fashioned sort of name that makes no connection in anybody 's mind with a swirling mass of warm air and piled clouds that is bearing down on the coast , thunder and lightning flickering from its belly , the waves beneath it being whipped up into a fury . |
22 | The whole house smelled of it , of lost youth shrivelled up into a kind of dust . |
23 | For we were seized up into a kind of ritual which seemed afterwards to have its formal cadences like a dance . |
24 | Its head was down and its back sloped up into a kind of point at the rear . |
25 | Just as long as the heat does n't build up into a storm . ’ |
26 | If Anne reminded me of a gazelle , then Mrs. Constantine was like a snake : supple and seemingly without bones , smooth , lustrous , with wicked black eyes like stones and shining black hair twisted up into a knot on top of her head and a wide , wide mouth with disturbingly red lips and a flickering tongue that darted out to lick the crimson lips when she was concentrating on the cards . |
27 | Up into a crouch , charge . |
28 | He felt his way across the joists in front of him , got his legs free from the cupboard and was able to get up into a crouch , balancing on a joist , hands just above his head , holding on to rough , undressed wood . |
29 | So I went up into a tree and I stayed there all night . |
30 | the water all over his self with the wings , with his wings , then he flew up into a tree to tie |