Example sentences of "[to-vb] into [noun sg] " in BNC.

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31 In some cases , the final shape of the RMC is different from that originally envisaged and some of them took as much as five years to come into existence .
32 We seem to have two kinds of ‘ existenceworthiness ’ : the dewdrop kind , which can be summed up as ‘ likely to come into existence but not very durable ’ ; and the rock kind , which can be summed up as ‘ not very likely to come into existence but likely to last for a long time once there ’ .
33 We seem to have two kinds of ‘ existenceworthiness ’ : the dewdrop kind , which can be summed up as ‘ likely to come into existence but not very durable ’ ; and the rock kind , which can be summed up as ‘ not very likely to come into existence but likely to last for a long time once there ’ .
34 And that catalyst , it seems , is unlikely to come into existence spontaneously , except under the direction of other RNA molecules .
35 But if replication needs complex machinery , since the only way we know for complex machinery ultimately to come into existence is cumulative selection , we have a problem .
36 Suppose we want to suggest , for instance , that life began when both DNA and its protein-based replication machinery spontaneously chanced to come into existence .
37 Windmills , which had begun to come into existence during the 16th century were by now a common sight throughout the Lothians .
38 The inflationary stimulus of the war saw the promotion of fifteen offices between 1793 and 1815 , but twenty-nine were to come into existence between 1815 and 1830 and fifty-six between 1830 and 1844 .
39 An embryonic European central bank is to come into existence soon after 1994 , the starting date of the second stage .
40 But he was still at an experimental stage of his thinking , and this enabled his political opportunism to come into play .
41 At the very least , the law of anticipated reactions is likely to come into play .
42 At the same time , while it was now impossible to recover any significant sense of the centrality of English within the process of political democracy , the Cambridge Crisis allowed the wider debates about the " democratic " process to come into play within English studies .
43 erm yes , I mean you ca n't deny the fact that one should always try and work towards achieving higher standards and the comparisons between different hotels erm are obvious , because one personally one 's personal experience is bound to come into play .
44 He took great care not to touch her or allow his grubby clothes to come into contact with her beautiful skirt and creamy-white blouse .
45 Any strong chemicals , if allowed to come into contact with the urethral mucous membrane , which is very sensitive , may set up an irritative urethritis .
46 Girls on mountains tend to come into contact with more amphibious life than our men folk , on account of our toilet arrangements .
47 If a large number of people are likely to come into contact with the chemical , the committee recommends testing on mice and other small mammals .
48 When you remove food from the freezer , do n't leave it in a warm atmosphere or allow it to come into contact with unclean hands , surfaces or equipment before returning it to the freezer — you will be at risk of freezing in any contamination .
49 Care had to be taken in fitting the cotter-pins securing the grips , and grooves were cut on the inside of the coffin into which the cotter-pins were bent , so as not to come into contact with the lead shell .
50 To touch a dead man or to come into contact with the blood of an injured person would make them unclean and mean that they could not carry out their duties .
51 In addition to videos , parents should also check the contents of music , novels and poems before allowing their children to come into contact with them .
52 However , even outer clothing must have required fastening and such wear would also have arisen if they were worn on undergarments in such a way as to come into contact with the inner face of the coarse outer garments ; such extreme wear is perhaps more likely to have occurred in this way than on the outside .
53 LIKE THE band itself , ‘ Shine On ’ is a shark-sleek and automatically impressive product to come into contact with for the first time .
54 Sun 's other weak point may be the fact that WABI 's Praxsys creators come from BIOS house Phoenix Technologies Ltd , where they would have had access to MS-DOS , although Phoenix was one of the pioneers of the concept of the clean room , where no-one that has any inside knowledge of the code being emulated is allowed to come into contact with the developers of the emulation .
55 In his view , directly transmitted diseases such as common colds generally have lower virulence than vector-borne diseases such as malaria because transmission rates in the former are higher if infective hosts continue to come into contact with other individuals .
56 It was to come into contact with a man who could write and see and feel .
57 Do n't overheat or allow any water to come into contact with it or the chocolate will become granular .
58 The child , it was thought , came into the world as a formless , inert blob of clay which was then moulded by parents , teachers , society , or whatever other forces he happened to come into contact with , and the shape that he eventually assumed was therefore entirely due to the characteristics others had decided to implant in him .
59 We shall consider the respective roles of Parliament and the courts , and in particular we shall examine the jurisdiction and functions of those courts and tribunals with which the caterer is likely to come into contact in the exercise of his or her profession .
60 Caterers are most likely to come into contact with industrial tribunals if one of their past or present employees refers a matter to the tribunal with regard to his or her contract of employment .
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