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

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31 None the less , their ability to achieve rapid movements not only in battle but , more important , before it , and to act in unison with the men-at-arms ( who were also mounted ) made them into ‘ by far the most important element in the armies which fought in France ’ .
32 Thus the dealers were forced to bluff the more , which amazingly , made them into more effective salesmen .
33 The people who suffer if they are broken are not the owners , the shareholders or the board of directors , but those who work in the industry — people who have given their lives to that industry , built up the companies ' assets and made them into going concerns attractive for privatisation .
34 A good friend of mine , in the same set for physics and chemistry , grew so disturbed that he took some scissors and cut all round the stiff white collars , which we have to wear on Sundays , and made them into little points . "
35 when they wore thin on the end and we had to put a new link in we never threw the two halves of the link away , we pointed them and made them into staples .
36 and it 's the literacy that just de made them into child adults
37 And it seemed to her that she was at least two people , for the person who had plunged them into the forest and brought them to this spot was not the same as the person who sat here waiting for Allen to say what he was doing , and for the Friar to return .
38 In the wild their seed capsules are first frozen and them buried under snow until the Spring kicks them into life .
39 In the late 1980s the Cubans manipulated them into a needless confrontation in Angola , which lasted much longer than it should have done because , this time , the Washington team was clumsier .
40 PLAN will be supporting the government 's policy to integrate these children into existing family units rather than absorb them into separate institutions . ’
41 They were used to being the pet of the house , and so whenever I went to my uncles , both dogs never seemed to take their eyes off me and their big mouths were always gaping wide , showing long sharp teeth , and I knew fine they 'd like to sink them into me .
42 Load them into my cab . ’
43 ‘ If they live , we can transplant them into the garden .
44 For three days before the unveiling ceremony , the cadets were on the site collecting stones from the hillside and cementing them into the cairn .
45 I 'll make them into double deckers .
46 That 's what record companies do , they give 'em just enough money to go and make a single , tell 'em they 're gon na make them into stars and the next minute , they do n't push the single , they do n't bother with it .
47 Because they worked for large , modern firms , the state was closely involved with their employers , which meant their industrial grievances led them into conflict with the state .
48 He led them into the mortuary , and pulled the sheet back from the body of the girl .
49 He led them into a room overlooking an attractive courtyard , with a paved area surrounded by shrubs .
50 But travellers in Latin America in the early twentieth century found there stations which led them into rhapsodies of praise .
51 Kings led them into battle for the land ( e.g. 2 Kings 8 ) and prophets pointed them to a righteousness that would bring them to a new highway , a land where mountains would be levelled , rough places smoothed ( Is. 40.4 ) , and the Prince of Peace would establish his kingdom .
52 Their critical comments about Marxism-Leninism led them into confrontation with the college authorities , who failed to bring the students back into line .
53 Perhaps even more than in the case of energising Anglican evangelical clergymen like William Marsh , in the ranks of evangelical nonconformity the powerful leadership of some ministers shaped the attitudes of chapel communities and led them into collaboration across denominational and church/chapel lines .
54 He then led them into the Catherine Palace , once more brandishing his authority whenever an official came forward to stop them .
55 A young man in an immaculate dark blue suit took over from the young woman who had met them at the elevator and led them into a vast room , furnished with antiques .
56 A pack leader saw the police in hot pursuit , called six Sturmabteilungen to him and led them into the stadium .
57 He led them into the kitchen , chatting to Blanche and Dexter as if they were house guests rather than police officers who had come to interview him about a murder .
58 Lady Macleod received the travellers in ‘ a stately dining-room ’ , fed them and led them into the drawing-room for tea to meet the family .
59 ‘ We are a scientific community , ’ he said as he led them into a dismal cavernous hall , ‘ and also a spiritual one . ’
60 He led them into a small , more comfortable room behind the great hall where a fire burnt in the canopied hearth ; it was cosier and not so forbidding , with its wood-panelled walls and high-backed chairs arranged in a semi-circle around the hearth .
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