Example sentences of "[noun] [to-vb] [adv prt] into the [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | But you must you must have been asked dozens of times to go back into the pop concert field ? |
2 | Tipping the handgrip back to the vertical allows the mercury to flow back into the bottom of the cup , so breaking the contact . |
3 | ‘ If I did wait for Garry to come back into the fold , what would you be doing ? ’ |
4 | It seemed incautious to attempt it indoors , and I was half-way out of bed to get a tray to take out into the garden before I realized the ridiculous nature of the enterprise . |
5 | If nothing else we hope that by attending college the students will have gained the confidence and determination to go out into the community and demand that changes be made . |
6 | They then tell the other child to come back into the room . |
7 | But costly turnovers allowed Washington to creep back into the game , despite the dominance of the Cowboys defence . |
8 | The old grandma who was holding the girl 's hand looked across at him as he walked to the window to stare down into the street to watch for Eddie . |
9 | City will be kicking themselves for allowing Cranfield to get back into the game , but the visitors must be given credit for a spirited second half performance . |
10 | I had a grand day at sea , but although the tide helped me to get back the wind did n't , and I used the engine to get back into the Crouch . |
11 | They had turned as if by common consent to go back into the cottage when the lights of a car , driven fast , came over the southern rise of the road . |
12 | Finally , once the client has agreed the schedule with the agency ( which may well be done before the content of the ads is finally agreed ) , it is the media person 's job to go out into the marketplace and buy the press space , the poster sites or the TV , radio or cinema spots . |
13 | ‘ There 's no need to storm off into the night . |
14 | This is the sort of muddle which often causes good ideas to run out into the sand . |
15 | But he then stressed his commitment to making a ‘ success ’ of our EC membership and his desire to get back into the ERM . |
16 | ‘ Maybe … but veterans deserve a bit of R and R. Why this sudden desire to get back into the action ? ’ |
17 | The most commonly-used light source is a discharge lamp , generally with a collimating capillary which allows a pencil of light to escape into the sample region without permitting sample to flow back into the discharge . |
18 | He stressed that he had relinquished his deferment after only two months , thereby allowing his name to go back into the draft pool at a time when he could not have known that the draft would be shortly replaced by a lottery system . |
19 | LEFT Never ignore a young dog 's request to go out into the back yard because this can cause it to soil around the home , and inhibits the toilet-training process . |
20 | Around the lid a number of small holes can be drilled for the water to pass through into the jar . |
21 | So , I pull handfuls of weed and leave it near the water 's edge , giving at least some of the creatures the chance to nip back into the water again . |
22 | The opportunity to go away from the school and work in a different atmosphere and with people who might have a different perspective on the management of organizations would give me the chance to look back into the school more objectively and question some of the assumptions I had grown to accept . |
23 | And Coleraine missed a golden chance to get back into the game when Collins saved a Dave Nicholls penalty in the 48th minute . |
24 | From year to year they used the same handrails to go down into the past : lifting the cartwheel at the crossroads , the drilling sessions by the river , the first ambush , marching at night between the safe houses , the different characters in the houses , the food , the girls … |
25 | Indeed the anonymous reviewer of the Pope and Weiner edition went on to propose that ‘ if the police staff college is to fulfil its task [ of producing a major project ] with any credibility , it must encourage its academic staff to go out into the field to study policing at first hand ’ . |
26 | I 'd got an assortment of sarnies and some cans of Diet Coke and bottles of Perrier at a café behind Liverpool Street and was allowing plenty of time for the traffic to get back into the City . |
27 | However , the Dragons have not scored in nearly 12 hours of football without him , taking just one point from the last eight games to sink back into the bottom three . |
28 | She did n't know how time passed , or how long it took the wild shrill crying to fade back into the sky ; but at last there was just the sound of the rain and the wind . |
29 | Tears stung her eyes , and she turned as from an unbearable sight to vanish back into the garden outside . |
30 | So they jumped out of the window on to the fire escape — and kicked in an outside door to get back into the studio at Beacon Radio , Wolverhampton . |