Example sentences of "[verb] into its " in BNC.

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1 Although a touring boat is long and difficult to turn , it has a useful steering capability designed into its shape .
2 But seen from within , they appear to be like nothing so much as a mirror-image of the Elizabethan world picture : a little world , tightly organised into its own ranks and with its own rules , as rigid in its own way as the most elaborate protocol at court or ritual in church .
3 In those days I slept a great deal , and sometimes I dreamed : not of what had happened but of emptiness and occasionally of chaos when the tenuous mosaic that was life shattered into its constituent parts and whirled away into unknown infinities .
4 The urge to murder split her mind like an abyss luring her to jump into its raging depths .
5 Following the recommendations of the Report of the Royal Commission on the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge in 1922 , the Board of Extra-Mural Studies was established in 1924 and moved into its new premises at Stuart House in 1928 .
6 The Natural History Museum in London moved into its present building in the 1880s , and a statue of Owen still greets visitors as they enter its main hall containing the great dinosaur skeletons .
7 On a ‘ Factory Walk About ’ , the most recent developments are as follows : — at the ‘ top end ’ , the old Wilton winding areas has become the pattern room which moved into its new location in April .
8 During evolution it could have been modified into its present form .
9 It was crude and probably impracticable , but it embodied an idea that has now come into its own in the age of the silicon chip .
10 This doubt is far from new , but today 's intellectual climate provides an ideal breeding-ground and it has come into its own again .
11 The water is freezing and there are no bikini-clad girls ti impress , but winter in Cornwall sees the surfing hardcore come into its own .
12 AFTER A FEW HOT SUMMERS , LIGHTWEIGHT , POLYCOTTON CLOTHING HAS COME INTO ITS OWN .
13 Moreover , on the academic front , the detailed empirical study of electoral behaviour through sample surveys has come into its own so that we now have a great deal more information on which to explore the hopes and fears of those who took sides on the issue of democracy at the same time as we are provided with information to check out the reality of key elements of the responsible party model in Britain .
14 Against that , though , there is a ‘ vast contemporary repertoire — the guitar has come into its own in popularity in this period , and people are now writing for it with a vengeance .
15 Bees clamber into its throat and sip a nectar so intoxicating that after they have taken only a little they begin to stagger about .
16 ‘ Eureka ! ’ she muttered triumphantly as she finally spotted the elusive hotel , and drew into its car park .
17 So IBM is publicly sticking to OS/2 , though it is also quietly hedging its bets by incorporating into its grand scheme other products with many of the same capabilities .
18 He peered into its depths amazed at the clarity .
19 But tonight her face seemed frozen into its gracious expression , like royalty in a traffic jam , and if she wished to herself that Hilda would make the odd concession so that civil conversation with her could be easier , nothing of this appeared in her manner .
20 The poll tax ( a.k.a. the community charge ) has been discredited by almost all politicians , even Darlington 's Conservative MP Michael Fallon , but for administrative and bureaucratic reasons it lumbers into its third year this April .
21 People are linked to each other by nature , and the abolition of artifice should allow nature to come into its own .
22 Its accommodation was considerably greater than would ever be needed in normal times , but its nationalistic opulence was intended to come into its own every four years , at the inauguration of successive presidents .
23 A House of Commons select committee , which has been looking at the feasibility of using ‘ combined heat and power ’ ( CHP ) , last week reported that the idea is about to come into its own in Britain .
24 The third and least well developed principle , the " representative " principle , began to come into its own .
25 But the most dramatic announcement came in December 1988 , only weeks before the Hinkley C Inquiry was about to launch into its sessions on the subject of safety and health .
26 If you are on holiday with your dog , for example , you may encounter a canal or a similar stretch of water unexpectedly , and it will be important to ensure that your dog does not plunge into its depths , as this could be dangerous .
27 I commute from Dunfermline to Edinburgh to work for an enlightened firm of architects which designed into its office a shower facility , which allows me to cycle in all weathers .
28 He waved her to a comfortable old armchair , and she sank into its deep cushions , curling up apprehensively on the big seat , her eyes watching him guardedly , trembling at the thought of what he had in store for her .
29 Now in this case D can be reduced to a standard canonical form E by a similar transformation unc where Y has precisely the same block diagonal form as D ; in effect , each diagonal block is resolved into its own canonical form .
30 Since the blend of the wind-group is not so perfect as that of the strings , owing to the greater uniformity of tone of the latter , passages of which the texture can be resolved into its component patterns , each of which suits the individual character of some particular instrument or small group of instruments , ‘ come off ’ best on the wind .
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