Example sentences of "in to the " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | So got rid of him at last , wrote Harsnet ( typed Goldberg ) , and went in to the glass . |
2 | While most , for example narcissi and scillas , should be planted as soon as they are bought , tulips should not go in to the garden until November . |
3 | By then you will have become tuned in to the driving and will be better able to judge if it is safe to go a little faster . |
4 | It helps , for example , to improve hip abduction ( used in roundhouse kicks when the kicking knee is lifted to the side ) by sitting with the soles of your feet together and close in to the body . |
5 | ( c ) The knee drops slightly as the foot digs in to the opponent 's midsection |
6 | The BeSHT did more ; he promoted it to a higher level of importance ; he confirmed and extended the principle of enjoyment , bringing it much more centrally in to the people 's worship as a sense of divine gladness . |
7 | May be she did not do as well in the major championships as in previous years but in 1990 she still managed to win one Australian , get in to the final of the French and the US Opens , and the semi final of Wimbledon . |
8 | As we have seen , there may be cultural barriers to such reading , but leaving aside that potential difficulty , we invite the student to make a unique , personal response to the text , to tune in to the true voice of feeling , to participate in its expressiveness ; in short , to have an aesthetic experience . |
9 | Tass news agency said hundreds of wagons rolled in to the southern Soviet republic bordering Turkey , three days after the Soviet parliament authorised the army to take over the railways . |
10 | RADIO paging across the world is becoming a reality with the introduction of ‘ frequency agile ’ pagers which can listen in to the frequencies used by different countries . |
11 | Page 27 and View from City Road , page 29 Bank steps in : The Bank of England again stepped in to the currency markets to prop up sterling , taking its interventionist spending since the trade figures a fortnight ago to an estimated $3-$4bn . |
12 | Easter Day 1945 found him in the darkness of a cattle truck in a German railway tunnel ; there was a true resurrection moment when prisoners were allowed out in to the sunshine and flowers of the railway cutting . |
13 | We dropped down in to the trench and Tony produced a couple of tins of Compo rations . |
14 | Also there were the people who 'd been coming in to the shop when it was still Let It Rock . |
15 | ‘ It took me three attempts to land the fish but eventually I managed to bring it in to the bank and my mate Paul scooped the net under it . |
16 | Information has to be taken in to the brain — often through the eyes but this is only because humans rely so much upon this sense . |
17 | Nor does the book confine itself to a run-down of the different massage strokes ; it also ventures in to the territory of relaxation tips , body awareness exercises and meditation techniques to instill a sense of calm . |
18 | ‘ The man who brought you in to the Squad must have been Alan Jones . |
19 | Sarah Morgan came in to the room like a ghost , and McLeish drew breath as he saw her . |
20 | If Soviet soldiers get in to the parliament there will be a bloodbath . |
21 | Mr Major used his new policy adviser , Sarah Hogg , to ensure that Downing Street was putting its own ideas in to the review . |
22 | A successful private deal also means that creditors and shareholders have reached a voluntary consensus , which binds them in to the firm 's future health . |
23 | The result was that very soon indeed afterwards my father came with a very sad but kind face in to the room where I sat alone and told me he was sure I should not do that sort of thing again . |
24 | He dropped the note-book in the mud just where the water came and stamped on it , grinding it in to the soft mess of leaves . |
25 | He had visions of booking in to the same hotel several weeks running and a knowing clerk saying , ‘ Ah , I see sir has a new Mrs Smith this weekend … ’ as his latest girl flashed her ring on the desk . |
26 | We gazed enraptured at the city of Bath from the train as it drew in to the station — it was all laid out on the slopes of Lansdown like an aerial map of a moon landscape . |
27 | This procedure is akin to the methods now being used for computerised medical diagnosis , where the symptoms are fed in to the computer and the most likely illness is predicted . |
28 | A short blast on the ship 's siren to warn the dockyard staff ashore was followed by the thrashing of its propeller , as the transport began to manoeuvre in to the jetty . |
29 | ‘ I 'm having it , ’ said Nutty , barging his way in to the dining-room . |
30 | Almost 35 million Americans tuned in to the first , two-hour pilot , making it the most watched TV movie of the season . |