Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] into " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Bernie laid right into me , telling me I was stupid for losing them . |
2 | But the army has fallen bitterly into rival factions and the army had replaced the Duvaliers ' secret police as the only coherent force in the country . |
3 | It goes right into there , and I was staggering all day , you know when I would get up ? |
4 | It goes right into the subconscious of course ; no memorizing involved . ’ |
5 | Children 's playground , goes right into the playground . |
6 | She hung on his every word at dinner , and after coffee , when la Principessa excused herself and retired and the little group adjourned to the sitting-room for liquers and brandy , Sofia dropped to a cushion at his feet and gazed worshipfully into his face . |
7 | When a car drives slowly into her taxi , stationary at a traffic-clogged crossroads , it is more than the stupid accident it would be in London , New York or Sydney . |
8 | It is getting into the position of an excellent prize of war ; strategically it points right into the heart of Japan and into the hands of an enemy it weakens the Japanese bastion of Western defence . |
9 | Some of the common strategies deployed within lyrics , for instance creating the impression of the lyric 's reader as an intruder gazing voyeuristically into texts meant for private circulation , is one of the devices employed by poets to protect themselves . |
10 | But before all the sex trouble got properly into its swing there was all the other trouble brewing between Anwar and Changez . |
11 | We crossed the silent wilderness north of London , the grass withering under a warm sun , and passed eventually into Leicestershire . |
12 | We signed another form , paid another , smaller deposit , and checked right into a motel in Santa Barbara for a long rest . |
13 | The rest of my mates steamed right into them . |
14 | For just an instant she seemed to see right into his eyes , past the protective barrier that he instinctively put up against intruders . |
15 | Twelve days later I received a call from an exultant Sylvia who told me that , on the previous evening , she had in fact managed to go right into the cupboard and switch off the light . |
16 | And so , er , when th the reapers were gathering in the harvest they were not allowed to go right to the edge of the field , they had to leave a border , they were not to go right into the corners , they were to leave those areas , so that the poorer members , so that those who did not have could come and could gather what was left behind . |
17 | The gravel track led downhill into a narrow belt of silver birch and rowan . |
18 | He was suddenly seeing right into the crystalline spaces of the famous poem . |
19 | Their eyes locked together for an instant , and she felt as though he was seeing right into her soul , into bits of her that no one had ever seen before . |
20 | The day passed slowly into afternoon . |
21 | An ancient city which has plunged right into the midst of the twentieth century , Bangkok is a fascinating mixture of ancient and modern values — noisy markets right next to the high walls of turreted royal palaces , serene gardens overlooked by modern hotels and the notorious Phatphong Road for discos , massage parlours and outrageous floorshows . |
22 | The sail was only too short , and after rounding Toward Point , we steamed slowly into Rothesay Bay , whose shipping and surroundings brought to us manifold reminders of city life : it was a strong contrast to the quiet of the Arran hills towering heavenward above the encircling wreaths of mist . |
23 | At 0800 hours Guiding Lights steamed slowly into Millbay Docks at Plymouth flying the blue " under arrest " ensign and escorted by the cutters . |
24 | However , at the end of the film , the car driven by Mark ( Sean Connery ) drives right down to the end of the road , and instead of falling into the ( non-existent ) harbour , turns right into a previously unsuspected street or quay along its edge and disappears from view . |
25 | But it had fallen mostly into desuetude in mid-nineteenth-century Europe and it had certainly not been evident in France during the reign of Louis-Philippe . |
26 | I got right into it the first couple of series . |
27 | She did n't even know at what point friendship had turned into love , and if she had realised it when it happened the new bud of feeling might have blossomed crazily into hopeless longing and tongue-tied need … or perhaps it would have frosted away and died . |
28 | To Sulentic 's surprise , he has also found that the connection can be traced right into the central nucleus of NGC 43 19 — very much as we might expect if , as Arp has often suggested , high redshift objects are somehow shot out from the centres of otherwise normal galaxies . |
29 | Raising the rig ( Figs 55 & 56 ) The main points here are to swim vigorously into wind , which will help release the water off the back of the sail , and lift the sail upwards and diagonally into the wind . |
30 | My hon. Friend the Member for Halifax made the point that the rundown of long-stay care for the elderly in our health service and the move towards the elderly having the opportunity to go only into private nursing care is to be deprecated . |