Example sentences of "[adv] and [verb] [pron] into [art] " in BNC.
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1 | He rushed in and threw himself into a chair . |
2 | Taking controlled deep breaths will calm you down and get you into a more relaxed rhythm rather than a state of uncontrolled panic . |
3 | In pure reaction from terror he broke down and wept himself into a deep , swooning sleep as soon as he was alone with his blessed candle ; but when he awoke strangely refreshed and heartened he had his wits again , and could reason about his escape . |
4 | The serjeant-at-arms , hidden behind the guard of his conical helmet , dragged me down and pushed me into a chamber where a candle glowed in the darkness . |
5 | Another good way of practising the start without having to go through the exhausting rig recovery is to sail along and lower yourself into the water . |
6 | It was an old town , its wealth based on brewing before the Second World War came along and transformed it into a steel and munitions centre . |
7 | With help from a tutor I finally put them together and fitted them into the cubic box I was given . |
8 | He clipped the sheets together and put them into an envelope . |
9 | What he had n't counted on was the tunnel effect of putting five together and pointing them into a wind that came more or less straight from the Urals after turning left over Norway . |
10 | Lorton swept the coins together and crammed them into the box . |
11 | erm as regards correlating things together and bunging them into the same factor analysis model and stuff like that er even if the questions are a bit different I think you can still do that legitimately because it 's still sort of expressing the strength of opinion on some sort of scale erm so I do n't see that that 'll er interfere with the ambitions you 've got as regards the data erm so er |
12 | Then he clipped the pages together and slipped them into a file . |
13 | He turned away and swung himself into the saddle of the horse that Bravd was holding . |
14 | She thought again of the clever pastry-cook who baked her man to her liking , and of La Carmellina , who lost her true love when he climbed a cherry tree into the clouds and found himself in the lair of the sorceress Zenaida — Zenaida , who had been robbed of sleep by the curse of another fairy , and had stolen Carmellina 's love away and changed him into a songbird . |
15 | I was bleeding from a laceration on my scalp and was so drunk that I had no recollection of what had happened ; a Sergeant quizzed me closely and seeing that I was incapable of speech , took me downstairs and put me into an ambulance . |
16 | Ross , the steward , appeared , commiserated that they were all soaked through and took them into the lounge . |
17 | He returned shortly and ushered them into an airy office , overlooking the Grand Union Canal . |
18 | Yet though the witches bring his already existing ambition out they can not be completely blamed for his downfall and degeneration as it this , his own ambition which eventually takes him over and turns him into a psychopath , killing merely out of feeling and without reason . |
19 | A lay brother came over and took us into the abbey church to hear morning mass and , believe me , for the glory is now gone , the abbey church of Glastonbury was the nearest thing to heaven on earth . |
20 | ‘ There is no way we are going in to take over and turn it into a repertory theatre . |
21 | Then they ran outside and carried everything into the kitchen — their chickens , their fishing things . |
22 | Redo the thread back on and turn it into a socket frequently used by the victim and get the hell out . |
23 | ’ Farrell switched the two-way off and jammed it into the seat pocket beside him . |
24 | Three children , aged between four and seven , scream as uniformed East Berlin police drag them and their mother off and push them into a lorry as they stand outside the US embassy in East Berlin , hoping desperately to get inside . |
25 | Far better to broaden their remit through touring , education work , equal opportunities , it argues , than to cut them off and drive them into the arms of market forces . |
26 | Left alone , Meredith ignored her shaking legs and managed to strip off and ease herself into the heavy waist petticoats from beside the chest . |
27 | We tried tooth and nail and finally impaled it on a thorn tree , tugging at it until the branch flew off and hurtled us into a ditch . |
28 | He greeted them briskly and folded himself into a chair . |
29 | He folded the tissue carefully and tucked it into the back of his notebook . |
30 | Pages were put together by gathering the material up and roughing it into a layout based round the principal hooks — the headlines and pictures which were the only things that really mattered . |