Example sentences of "and [conj] [verb] into " in BNC.

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1 That one or two might make enough money to pass as legitimately successful , but that most would go on hoping for and talking about the ‘ up for none touch ’ that was just around the corner if only this and that fell into place until they became little more than saloon-bar bores .
2 I suppose English critics will always work on the old lines , and try to get behind the book to quiz the author … instead of seeing that he is almost irresponsible , that it is the result of haphazard circumstances , and that the writer rubs his eyes and wonders how this and that got into his pages as much as the reviewer does .
3 no this is erm where bearings and that come into it
4 The emergency stash stood at £200 in fivers , and that went into a back pocket .
5 After the meal , someone suggested a walk on Hampstead Heath , and that turned into tea at a small patisserie close to where Loretta had parked her car .
6 Is the Prime Minister aware that his claim to have reined in the ambitions of our partners is a vain boast that bears no relation to reality , and that going into Maastricht we had a Community of 12 and coming out we had a Community of 11 and a half ?
7 ‘ Large Victorian dwellings on major roadways do not provide suitable accommodation for families and if converted into flats they tend to decline rapidly , ’ Mr Warren said .
8 This means that in human embryos even when there are several hundred cells present the fate of the cells is not fixed and if divided into two , two normal embryos can still develop .
9 And I think that 's what a lot of problem with condemned by the G P is is they 're not able to articulate the unhappiness that 's coming from the eating disorder , so they 're told to go away and put on a couple of pounds and because they have n't expressed that feeling the G P ca n't or is n't thinking enough to try and and poke into it a little bit more .
10 I mean it was just lifted from the scripture and and put into a prayer or whatever .
11 For this reason , in gliders it is important to avoid watching the instruments during nose-down pitching manoeuvres such as stall recoveries and when recovering into normal flight following a cable break during a steep winch launch .
12 It would be present in the brains of the trained — and shocked — animals in higher concentration than in the naïves — and when injected into mice would in its turn produce freezing behaviour .
13 The transitive verb meant ‘ to make suitable ’ and when translated into human terms this indicated a solution to a number of perceived difficulties in the juvenile labour-market : at the very least it offered a safeguard against redundancy through technological change ; it provided a necessary companion for ‘ intelligence ’ , one of the qualities demanded by ‘ modern ’ industrial conditions ; and it seemed to imply a degree of social contentment , integration , and stability , which were important , if only in so far as they could serve as protection against the ravages of unemployment and , in extreme cases , unemployability .
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