Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] [pron] [adv prt] into the " in BNC.

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1 " My mother is threatening to dismiss all the staff unless I tell her which one of them admitted me back into the house last night .
2 I put them back into the tank , still amazed they 'd had the strength to move the glass .
3 I mean the old index-linked certificates , when they came up I put them back into the fourth issue , and then the fifth issue and so on because the bonuses are better .
4 And , at the end of a we , when I put it back into the , the conversation
5 Wait until I let you through into the last cellar , and then I must take the keys back to the steward .
6 I followed them out into the car park and sat , miserably , in the back of Quigley 's car as , in a mood of forced cheerfulness , we drove towards the Quigleys ' house behind Mrs Danby 's Rolls .
7 Then someone pulled her back into the plane and the door closed .
8 I took him out into the garden .
9 ‘ No buts , ’ said the man and without warning gave Charlie a shove in the chest which propelled him back into the street .
10 They scarcely knew the man — and , no doubt , curiosity was one of the things which brought them out into the streets to see him .
11 There was a way down , on iron rungs , from the Reading Room , and a way out , through a high locked portal , which brought you up into the sunless Egyptian necropolis , amongst blind staring pharaohs , crouching scribes , minor sphinxes and empty mummy-cases .
12 She made it down into the long drawing-room with a sort of grim look on her face that Alain noted with a frown .
13 Ashamed of her excess of imagination , she let herself out into the street and covered the few yards to her car under the trees .
14 As she let herself out into the garden through the kitchen door , she gave a small shiver that had absolutely nothing to do with the autumnal chill in the air .
15 And while you 're at it , would you like to tell me who let you back into the house ? "
16 I suppose , technically speaking , ’ he paused , ‘ if you put her out into the road she would have no roof over her head and we should have to take her in . ’
17 I mean can you bring it out into the open ?
18 Ruth saw thrown spears hang in the air as if floating in water , and she thrust herself down into the grass , her face in her hands so as not to see any more .
19 Then she thrust it back into the wardrobe .
20 ‘ It was good of you to get in touch with me , Simon , ’ she murmured as he hooked down the loft-ladder and she followed him up into the roof space .
21 She followed him back into the little harness store and sat down on a bench while he lit the paraffin stove which soon filled the room with its smell and heat .
22 She followed him out into the hallway , toting her small suitcase .
23 As she followed him out into the sunshine , Sabine thought , I 'll ask him later , and pushed the memory of Antoinette 's venom to the furthest recesses of her mind .
24 There was no sign of tenderness in the man who tossed her up into the saddle the next morning , but , seeing him now in the full light of day , Isabel was forced to concede that he was still handsome .
25 A burly serjeant-of-arms stopped them , asked their business , and grudgingly let them through into the main courtyard where they were halted by a steward who took them up into the main hall .
26 You took her out into the road and … uh … battered her fatally .
27 She nursed him back into the winning story .
28 And see can you get him back into the world ? ’
29 You carry it out into the white , shimmering light .
30 He fell into her arms without a sound , and she dragged him back into the storeroom .
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