Example sentences of "[verb] into [noun] the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | On Sept. 24 , Gamsakhurdia declared a state of emergency — to come into force the following day — because " a military and civilian putsch is under way in the republic " . |
2 | It seems that it is being said that , with the onset of the campaigns , the Department feared a flood of ’ non-specific applications ’ and therefore withdrew the original regulations and laid new regulations , to come into force the following day . |
3 | On June 21 the congress formally voted into existence the Communist Party of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic . |
4 | Came into work the next morning . |
5 | Three years ago when the new regulations came into force the then Secretary of State for Social Security said this means the end of the era of poverty . |
6 | Before the Act of 1989 came into force the inherent jurisdiction of the High Court with respect to children was usually exercised through the machinery of wardship . |
7 | It can only be proceeded with with the government 's consent , and before going into committee the appropriate Minister has to tell the House that the proposed spending has the government 's approval . |
8 | The new prosperity of ‘ industrious ’ Catalonia and ‘ opulent ’ Valencia threw into contrast the industrial decline that had left central Spain a backwater of artisan industry . |
9 | Because the truth was that this evidence of care and tenderness was harder to bear than any neglect , for it threw into question the whole basis of their lives together . |
10 | Moreover Bacon 's anti-humanism and emphasis on despair threw into question the very basis of Minton 's art . |
11 | The episode threw into chaos the normal wage bargaining consultations and only after several months of discussions was a new system of work organisation finally thrashed out . |
12 | Into that stream of pure gothic fiction there was eventually added the element of crime or suspected crime , thus bringing into existence the romantic suspense novel . |
13 | I think he would have tore into Russell the next second , with his fists or his revolver , but now the Spencer was levelled at his belly ; almost touching it . |
14 | In the end , John Torode 's attitudes bring into question the very purpose of law . |
15 | ‘ No simple creatures of legend for Tallis Keeton — while the rest of us engender Robin Hoods and Green Jacks and golden-tressed princesses , you bring into existence the living earth . |
16 | Then , while the vapour condensed into oceans the high percentage of CO 2 would have caused a runaway greenhouse effect . |
17 | As 8,000 refugees escaped into Croatia the last bridge was blown up . |
18 | The all embracing structure of the nation as a family headed by the Emperor , made it impossible to challenge particular aspects of the social order without calling into question the ultimate authority of the Emperor . |
19 | If the Foreign Office can not agree with MI6 as to who are Britain 's enemies , the effectiveness of MI6 is at risk of being submerged by political expediency , calling into question the whole point of having such an organisation in the first place . |
20 | He said the Danakil had killed some Greek traders who had ventured into Bahdu the previous year . |
21 | When work can no longer be taken for granted nor can leisure , and this , in turn , calls into question the hedonistic routine on which rock had been based . |
22 | The decision should save £40 million per year , and calls into question the future viability of the Sellafield reprocessing facility . |
23 | Since there have been very significant changes in population structure and family composition over the last two centuries , any discussion of how family relationships have changed must always acknowledge that we are not comparing like with like — an observation which of course itself calls into question the over-simplified view of a gradual deterioration of family ties from pre-industrial society to the present day . |
24 | Not the least of these problems is that raised by Poulantzas that the concentration upon the pluralistic influences within the state ( introducing the ‘ problematic of the subject ’ ) , calls into question the whole basis of a specifically Marxist analysis , and structuralist analysis may thus become indistinguishable from pluralist or elitist analysis . |
25 | The final result awarded to each candidate takes into consideration the formative assessment results obtained during their clinical attachment , which incorporates a summative assessment obtained before the examination . |
26 | Standardization is a statistical technique which takes into account the differential age distribution ( see Table 4.11 ) and this suggests that older women do indeed experience more ill health than males of the same age . |
27 | This balance is more in keeping with the needs of young people and takes into account the low self-esteem of many of those in public care . |
28 | This approach takes into account the changing nature of the relationship between the leaders and others and indicates how it may develop . |
29 | If , however , instead of being redeemed , the preference shares are converted into ordinary shares and the number of ordinary shares issued takes into account the accrued premium , no premium becomes payable and , accordingly , there is no distribution . |
30 | Whereas a comprehensive secondary school might offer some 30 subjects for all its pupils , and about a dozen subjects account for the great majority of A levels , the curriculum explodes in higher education , part of a post-school explosion even greater when one takes into account the vast number of technical and vocational courses that exist in non-advanced further education . |