Example sentences of "into [noun sg] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 There sprang into existence a new kind of book of which Cyril Burt 's How the Mind Works is a good example , despite the cloud under which some of his own work has recently fallen .
2 The socialist parties thought of themselves as the avant-garde of a class which was striving to bring into existence a new kind of society , and for them the struggle for power of the working class was , in principle , more important than any existing institutions .
3 ‘ No simple creatures of legend for Tallis Keeton — while the rest of us engender Robin Hoods and Green Jacks and golden-tressed princesses , you bring into existence the living earth .
4 On June 21 the congress formally voted into existence the Communist Party of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic .
5 Into that stream of pure gothic fiction there was eventually added the element of crime or suspected crime , thus bringing into existence the romantic suspense novel .
6 The fact that the lane runs so wide and straight also tells us that when it came into existence the open arable fields of Barton and Wootton did not yet extend so far .
7 However , as Grant points out , working with voluntary groups and networks of carers ( indeed , creating and enhancing the capacity of such groups to provide care ) brings into play a different repertoire of activities and skills on the part of team members from those involved in the development of statutory services .
8 This brings into play the logical faculties of discrimination and selection which assimilate perceptual stimuli to previously encountered images on the basis of structural analogy .
9 It would seem that they are the molecules responsible for maintaining the harmonious , smooth running of the body 's many functions , stimulating the release of hormones when required , organizing healing and repair and bringing into play the complex workings of the immune system .
10 The jaw muscles turn out to have been placed to generate the most powerful bite possible , especially when Diatryma brought into play the powerful downwards hingeing action of the upper beak on the skull .
11 Luke grinned , throwing into contrast the tiny creases round his mouth , and at the corners of his eyes .
12 The new prosperity of ‘ industrious ’ Catalonia and ‘ opulent ’ Valencia threw into contrast the industrial decline that had left central Spain a backwater of artisan industry .
13 His stiff pose throws into contrast the dance-like arrangement of Bowler 's limbs .
14 Again , when the Irishman Scotus Eriugena , one of the two finest minds of the ninth century ( the other was Gottschalk , close student of Augustine 's works and initiator of the controversy on predestination ) , translated from Greek into Latin the Heavenly Hierarchy of Pseudo-Denis ( c .860 ) , he might at first sight have been engaged in something purely academic .
15 The episode threw into chaos the normal wage bargaining consultations and only after several months of discussions was a new system of work organisation finally thrashed out .
16 Once you come into contact with the other side you can drop down into command the individual tanks and engage in fast armoured conflict — the controls here do take some getting used to , although you can opt to assign either the driving or firing to the computer .
17 He managed furthermore discreetly to put into circulation the audacious proposal that he should be the first Governor-General of the two independent states .
18 The next step is to stop paying lip service to the theory and put into practice the long-held promise of meeting the needs and aspirations of users and carers .
19 When we turn from LETTERS to Sabbatical ( 1982 ) , the latter seems almost to have been written to put into practice the theoretical position laid down in ‘ The Literature of Replenishment ’ .
20 Three years ago when the new regulations came into force the then Secretary of State for Social Security said this means the end of the era of poverty .
21 Before the Act of 1989 came into force the inherent jurisdiction of the High Court with respect to children was usually exercised through the machinery of wardship .
22 It seems that it is being said that , with the onset of the campaigns , the Department feared a flood of ’ non-specific applications ’ and therefore withdrew the original regulations and laid new regulations , to come into force the following day .
23 On Sept. 24 , Gamsakhurdia declared a state of emergency — to come into force the following day — because " a military and civilian putsch is under way in the republic " .
24 The decision throws into confusion the single market for free trade between EC member states .
25 Yet even on the most charitable view of facts , one can hardly treat propositions like " Ruritania does not exist " as being on the same logical footing as any other synthetic true singular propositions without throwing into confusion the whole concept of existence .
26 My survival plan spun into action the other week with that hard-fought point against Northtown , and although we went down 4–1 against Clansford United I was not unduly worried — every well-oiled engine needs a little fine tuning .
27 The system has the option of calling into action an articulatory loop , a form of silent speech rehearsing which gives the system more time either to accept more information or to examine the message in greater detail .
28 Unless this implicit argumentative dimension is recognized , it is not possible to understand how the actual historical events were able to realize into explicitness a particular set of implicit half-formed justifications .
29 By cutting the state salaries of clergy and ending religious domination of education , the republican government pushed into opposition the near 25% of the Spanish population who were Catholics .
30 The eyes of Mr. Morrissey gleam with a missionary zeal that shames into submission the cringing doubts of those yet unconvinced .
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