Example sentences of "[prep] [verb] into the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | A TEENAGE motorist died in a pile-up on the A174 Parkway road in Cleveland after running into the central reservation . |
2 | The Frenchmen claimed they were making a film for tunnel owner Eurotunnel but were detained after crossing into the British sector . |
3 | Isabel paused in the act of stepping into the worn garment and met her maid 's worried brown eyes . |
4 | There are also problems of tapping into the contemporary market in Japan . |
5 | The Heart of Wales Line , famous for its beautiful scenic views , was promoted by , amongst others , the London and North Western Railway Company as a means of tapping into the industrial traffic in the Swansea area , with the final section of railway between Builth Road and Llandovery opening in 1868 . |
6 | Arguedas , however , was faced with the thorny problem of translating into the alien medium of Spanish the sensibility of a people which expresses itself in Quechua , and his great achievement has been to evolve a style which captures the rhythm and flavour of Quechua to convey the spiritual world of the Andean Indians . |
7 | On Saturday the pupils could enjoy the austere pleasures of going into the small granite town of Elgin , something Richard did not enjoy but decided to do because his injured feet ruled out most alternatives . |
8 | It 's a bit like that with me , except that instead of going into the technological future I had to go back in time . |
9 | I 'm sure you 'll agree it 's a matter of going into the right stock at the right time . |
10 | Instead of going into the green room , we went to the girls ' dressing room . |
11 | Yeah we 'll restrict it instead of going into the full year |
12 | Hitler 's war deprived Wooderson of going into the Olympic arena in Helsinki in 1940 as a hot favourite for the 1500 metres ; Budd 's natural progression was hindered by her country 's policy of apartheid . |
13 | It was Lucy 's hope of getting into the outer office unchallenged . |
14 | Waiting for him , she thought of getting into the big bed . |
15 | Thus out of the middle only 27 will have any chance of getting into the top flight and then only into the second round of the Pilkington Cup . |
16 | One does n't want them to sort of follow it blindly , of course , one wants them to discuss it carefully , very carefully , but it has to sort of fit into the ongoing life of the institution and not be a kind of little game that someone is playing on their own somewhere because they happen to be linked with the university or doing a degree or something . |
17 | However , in 1969 , a large-scale American project , JOIDES ( Joint Oceanographic Institutions Deep Earth Sampling ) was able to confirm it , in the course of a programme of drilling into the deep ocean floors to sample the rocks and sediments there . |
18 | But after an hour or so of trudging into the stiff wind , a slight feeling of despair crept over me . |
19 | Today many young people fail in the task of maturing into the genital phase of adolescence , a process which apparently needs much time ; they do not fully outgrow the phallic stage . |
20 | Empathy is described in various ways and Burnard ( 1987a ) discussing its use in psychiatric nursing quotes Carl Rogers ' definition as ‘ a process of entering into the perceptual world of another person ’ . |
21 | Cantona , whose hat-trick lit up the Charity Shield at Wembley , had to be lectured by Wilkinson on the virtues of integrating into the English game . |
22 | It will also inform policy makers and industrial relations practitioners , by examining the consequences of introducing into the public sector management methods more commonly associated with some private sector enterprises . |
23 | A wife who forgives and forgets ( or , better still , remembers ) should beware of falling into the self-destructive doormat trap . |
24 | Stirling naturally stressed , as he had all along , that the SAS must remain outside any airborne brigade , otherwise they ran the risk of falling into the operational vacuum which lay between the small specialist raid and the larger tactical operation . |
25 | Far from engineering the union , as has been widely suspected , her grandmother advised her about the difficulties of marrying into the royal family . |
26 | Dittmar , incredibly , tried a backhand volley return of serve into the side-wall nick . |
27 | This means that in order to paddle a straight line in a white water boat we need to include a bit of steering into the forward stroke . |
28 | As Jamie was 10 shots behind going into the final round at Crans , his regular caddie , Mark Steers , was quite confident that he had chosen a good week to take off . |
29 | There was his friend Barbara Rubin , Andy Warhol , but , most of all , once in touch with the poet himself , observes Miles , ‘ it was like plugging into the main switchboard — he knows everyone ’ . |
30 | Lovely name for getting into the Common Market . |