Example sentences of "[verb] move into a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Here the unidentified sex attacker has moved into a new phase , with an identity created for him by the media , often assisted by the police . |
2 | ‘ Sterling has moved into a major bear market . |
3 | Sting 's set with a fascinatingly diverse band sounded as though he has moved into a different dimension from his Police days — to this reviewer at least , he was a revelation . |
4 | Mr. Wharton is a founding partner of the multi-national High Point plc consultancy organisation , and has moved into a non-executive role as Deputy Chairman of the group in order to devote more time to his Presidential activities . |
5 | Des has moved into a groaning squat . |
6 | However , when the firm wants to move into a new area , a special project organization may be created for this purpose . |
7 | In the end I got moved into a single cell : apparently a lot of this girl 's stuff went missing and she practically accused me . |
8 | While waiting to move into a new apartment in the Boulevard Saint Germain , Apollinaire lived with the Delaunays for almost two months during the autumn of 1912 , and at this time the Delaunays ' studio became the meeting-place of a new group . |
9 | At the moment the hospital radio station is waiting to move into a new studio . |
10 | Lyle , who was born in Shropshire , but now lives on the exclusive Went-worth estate , is scheduled to move into a 16-bedroom home near Edinburgh in February and he added : ‘ Who knows , the baby might even be born in Scotland . ’ |
11 | But in our time , it 's very quiet now so we 've we 've moved into a different routine again , where I have two two sergeants out at one time , changing over er frequently so they do n't get bored . |
12 | But by 1842 the congregation had moved into a new building , later used by the Presbyterians of McCracken Memorial and demolished in 1968 to make way for their new church hall . |
13 | Within the year Thomas had moved into a new company , Macdonald Raintree , which was partly owned by BPC and by Raintree in the US and which had been set up mainly to sell rights and coeditions in Raintree output in Europe . |
14 | However , by 1884 even his timid wife believed in his affluence as they had moved into a pleasant merchant 's house in Didsbury where their youngest children , Walter and Jessie , were born . |
15 | During the summer of 1979 I had moved into a collective house whose occupants were libertarian hippies , socialists , Christians and noisy heterosexual feminists . |
16 | The industry , meanwhile , had moved into a different era ; the international standards had changed , and it was time to bring the law up-to-date . |
17 | Now , Kirov had moved into a secondary stage , manipulating every conversation so that apparently casual words left just the subtlest hint of something else unsaid , yet implicitly suggested . |
18 | Following township rumours that the Mandelas had been living apart for some weeks , the Sowetan newspaper said Mrs Mandela continued to live in the mansion she had built in a better part of Soweto but Mr Mandela had moved into a well-guarded home in Johannesburg 's affluent northern suburbs . |
19 | Tony Zanetta : ‘ David had moved into a little house in Chelsea in New York and called Michael Lipman . |
20 | We lost our home — there was no way Mum could afford to go on living there — and had to move into a little council house . |
21 | Unisys Corp 's DCP line of Distributed Communications Processors for the 2200 mainframe line have moved into a new generation with launch of the DCP600 family of intelligent network processors , including fault-tolerant models . |
22 | A MUM and her three children have moved into a cardboard box to demand ‘ decent accommodation ’ from the Housing Executive . |