Example sentences of "[adv] into [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | But they did talk about how , if you have a holistic attitude to some one , you have to take account of their social and environmental factors which would take them perhaps into green politics . |
2 | Isabel screamed again , twisting her head from side to side , catapulted brutally into panic-stricken hysteria . |
3 | Here the division is basically into advancing and retreating coasts . |
4 | After the death of her father in 1891 she withdrew entirely into private life , devoting herself almost obsessively to the care of her mother , even though the latter soon came out of retirement to become a royal lady-in-waiting . |
5 | Some are dismantled entirely into separate components for generative reassembly in reference to grammatical rule , others are partly dismantled but are left as adaptable formulaic frameworks to be adjusted to circumstances ; some again remain as holistically fixed , essentially large-scale lexical items . |
6 | And er eventually when we got the ne purchased the next door premises , we decided to turn that entirely into aquatic . |
7 | On all sides she saw glazed abstracted eyes click suddenly into sharp focus as they registered her presence , and she observed sly smiles and muttered remarks being exchanged between neighbouring benches . |
8 | Then he looked up suddenly , beginning in a harsh voice , then breaking suddenly into broad dialect : ‘ I love — Ah luv thee ! |
9 | They went up another narrow passageway , not so much a passage as a mere slit between houses , and came out suddenly into open space . |
10 | The arguments within the Thatcher administration went on apace over whether to swing the axe fiercely into public spending in the winter of 1980–1 , with ministers like Prior , Pym , Walker , and Carrington arguing the case for maintaining public expenditure and investment , monetarists outside the government like Alan Budd urging far more stringent monetary restraint , and Sir Geoffrey Howe at the Treasury buffeted about in between . |
11 | Koestler 's central idea was that things fall naturally into treelike hierarchies of parts and wholes , systems and subsystems . |
12 | The assessment of Bob Bennett , the county chairman and an Isle of Man tax exile , would slip naturally into Financial Report . |
13 | And indeed , as we have seen , as ‘ his ’ astonishing run of victories turned gradually but inexorably into calamitous defeat , the tide of Hitler 's popularity first waned rather slowly , then ebbed sharply — a decline accelerating decisively after Stalingrad , when Hitler 's personal responsibility for the catastrophe was widely recognized . |
14 | Although all of the organisations studied were recruiting only into temporary jobs , in some organisations temporary jobs offered a step on the way to regular employment . |
15 | The British forces were instructed to move only into key areas from where they could carry out their task of rescuing POWs . |
16 | Again , with 386-megabyte computers , diskfax and modems ‘ it is n't difficult to set up a valuable resource you can tap into at any time ’ ( he sees ample scope for expanding not only into other languages but building on expertise already gained in mailshot databases and distribution ) and British Telecom has been ‘ very responsive ’ . |
17 | Do we really believe that such an instinct is to be found encoded only into molecular and electromagnetic patterns within the brain ? |
18 | 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 . |
19 | For Draper , the principle of expanding only into related fields , where Virgin had at least a margin of experience and expertise , was sacrosanct . |
20 | The Naked Lunch does not end so much as tail off entropically into verbal fragments . |
21 | This has come about partly as a result of research over the last 10 years or so into various forms of involvement in the teaching of reading . |
22 | In most of those same cities , the task of spreading these changes outwards into other parts of the city has scarcely begun . |
23 | Its breath fled outwards into snow-bright dawn and it spat Jezrael through when she would have stuck in the slit . |
24 | The video becomes a radio , and the L and the M expand gently into Long-wave and Medium-wave . |
25 | Or try Lis Earle 's homemade scrub from her fascinating book Vital Oils ( Ebury Press , £6.99 ) : mix half a ripe avocado together with one tablespoon find ground oatmeal and one teaspoon olive oil , and massage gently into dampened skin . |
26 | The muddy track skirted the precipitous drop to the water one hundred feet below , then descended to the stream edge and meandered through ancient alders with red-tinted catkins , through poor pastures , passed blackthorn covered in deep purple sloes withering on spiny twigs and wound upstream into open moorland . |
27 | Educational and pedagogic strategies developed by feminists more conscious of the need to dig deeper into psychic processes in tackling sexual identities and subjectivities ( e.g. Walker dine , 1991 ) require more serious attention within antiracism , and have found a sympathetic counterpart in Phil lip Cohen 's cultural studies approach to antiracism ( Cohen , 1987 , 1988 , 1989a ) . |
28 | I felt myself falling , falling , as if for the first time , deeper and deeper into mysterious pits of passion and anxiety , longing and despair . |
29 | Moreover , feelings lying dormant will have already produced an individual who is troubled , unhappy and anxious , and the individuals behaviour will already be moving him or her inexorably deeper into emotional and social despair . |
30 | MGM had been responsible for some of the worst quota quickie outrages , and its new willingness to finance British-based production was the result of legislative changes which brought American companies deeper into British film production . |