Example sentences of "[noun] [vb past] [pers pn] into [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Keller 's Zurich upbringing made him into a skiier and sculler , and he raced for the Grasshopper club . |
2 | Lady Constance visited some suffragettes imprisoned in Holloway gaol , and this experience transformed her into a public figure with a single-minded burning cause . |
3 | Originally it had no towers and was aisleless , but extensive additions in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries made it into a three-aisled church with a tall tower . |
4 | In my teens , similar doubts lured me into the darker recesses of the family 's medical encyclopedia , there to discover I was Britain 's first recorded case of Futtock 's Syndrome . |
5 | A heavy door swung open and a figure beckoned them into a warm lozenge of light . |
6 | The social pressures of my peers precipitated me into a frenzied bout of heterosexuality , usually accompanied by drunkenness . |
7 | The replacements got their planes off the ground and Woolley marshalled them into a broad arrowhead , with Dickinson and Church out on the flanks . |
8 | In the worst of conditions , Gloucester were desperate to win and they made sure of victory in the first half , when Martin Roberts kicked them into a 6-0 lead with 2 penalties . |
9 | They found that he knew what he wanted ; that he was persuasive in trying to get it ; that what he wanted was good ; and they suddenly realized that this new young professor dragged them into the twentieth century . |
10 | Amy 's experiences turned her into a radical activist as a teenager . |
11 | Very light , very hurried steps , but the bare , glossy wood turned them into a muffled drum-roll . |
12 | A Reception lady showed me into a tiny broadcasting room full of switched-off microphones . |
13 | Loretta followed her into a spacious drawing-room , and seated herself in a chair to one side of the tiled fireplace , while Veronica took the chair opposite . |
14 | Sharpe spurred her into a clumsy gallop that made his heavy sword flap in its slings and crash its disc hilt painfully onto his left thigh . |
15 | Because McKenzie know little or nothing about rugby , the coach tossed him into the front row . |
16 | Worse still , the embassy refugees manoeuvred him into an impossible corner . |
17 | Finniston converted it into a major international research organisation that still exists today . |
18 | His title " Button " stuck even when Harvard shifted him into an administrative role ; he was obviously too intelligent to remain a runner . |
19 | In the Gulf , France 's lack of modern heavy armour pushed it into a glamorous , but marginal , job on the flank . |
20 | But whisky turned him into a savage bully . |
21 | Our questions ranged far and wide and his courtesy and patience turned them into an intriguing trail of discovery which was endlessly fascinating and richly rewarding , for he is also a natural raconteur . |
22 | Willi led her into a huge living-room with a window looking over the valley . |
23 | Flunkeys led them into a private part of La Noblesse where they were warmly greeted by an expansive Grunte , who presented the ladies with a flower and with grave courtesy showed each to her seat . |
24 | Carrie was hard put to it and she had little time to talk with him , but it was not long before Billy turned up at the cafe eager to see his friend and Carrie directed him into the back room . |
25 | Instead the overwrought director turned it into a bitter battle which ends with the lover , played by Sydney Pollack , savagely forcing Lysette 's character into his car . |
26 | The trials of his childhood and teenage years turned him into the perfect Prince , but they did not alter his fundamental nature . |
27 | The startled shopper handed it into the local police station . |
28 | But when the frog leapt out from behind one of the bananas , the astonished shopper scooped it into an empty tub of margarine and , fearing it might be poisonous , rushed Freddie to Lydney police station . |
29 | We talked a little till her cries took her into the little theatre . |
30 | The coincidental presence of the Prince of Wales in Broadstairs for a brief private visit to a friend on the same evening converted it into a two-paragraph story . |