Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] [pers pn] [adv prt] into [art] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | These include plungers , wormscrews ( for boring into a blockage and pulling it out ) , and scrapers for removing sludge and silt and either pushing it down the drain or pulling it back into the inspection chamber on which you are working . |
2 | It can involve redrawing the work to show a different scale of projection , or breaking it down into a general drawing or a series of drawings . |
3 | Depending on the obstructions you find , you could site the building exactly alongside the house , bring it forward of the building line ( if the planners will allow this — see later ) , or set it back into the garden . |
4 | Heseltine needs Thatcher to do the decent thing and step down this summer , or invite him back into the cabinet . |
5 | Sometimes the violent power of the Spirit is seen in almost physical terms , as when the Spirit of the Lord entered into Ezekiel and set him on his feet , or lifted him up , or brought him out into the valley ( Ezek. 2:2 , 3:12 , 37:1 ) . |
6 | Omnipresence was only one of several attributes that tipped him over into the realm of the superhuman . |
7 | After two years designing murals for Wimpey , the construction company , he took a teaching post that enticed him back into the photography world , and led to a post-graduate degree at the Royal College . |
8 | He walked on , climbing the flight of stone steps that brought him up into the Strand itself . |
9 | Then she was able to take the mental step that brought her out into the light again . |
10 | Beyond the long line of windows , past the Conservatory and the Laburnum Walk , they came to the winter-bound Pleasure Garden where yellow jasmine crawled over a tree stump , hamamelis , the wych-hazel shrub , thrust out golden hedgehog flowers along its leafless branches , and the stream coming from the kitchen garden — a winter river now — hurried into the culvert that carried it on into the baby lake in the field outside the Pleasure Garden . |
11 | ‘ Finally on the seventh day , I thought that , being Catholic , they 'd rest , but still unfed and unwatered , each pony was blindfolded and tacked up , and Raimundo got on each one 's back , and whipped it and whipped it out into the pampas , until the pony 's spirit was completely broken , and it 'll never argue with man again . |
12 | ‘ Come on , ’ he turned her neatly and propelled her back into the living room . |
13 | He looked momentarily surprised and then , after throwing Luke a somewhat triumphant look , he smiled and took her by the hand , and led her through into the living-room . |
14 | ‘ That 's him , then , all gone , ’ Gloria said , before a nurse came scurrying out through the doors , took her by the arm and led her back into the ward . |
15 | He signalled to the waiter that he had put two twenty-peseta notes on the table , and led her out into the afternoon sun . |
16 | The guy let him carry his own case and led him through into the concourse where the English driver from the Embassy pool was waiting . |
17 | Senga took her brother 's hand and led him out into the hall . |
18 | By promoting economic aspects and bringing them out into the open for everyone to see , we are contributing towards better informed decisions on the part of prescribers and policy makers alike . ’ |
19 | It was always a project which was in parallel with Queen , because we always had a positive attitude to people doing stuff outside the band , getting new experiences and bringing them back into the band . |
20 | Keith needs play therapy to stop his rage by expressing his frustration and bringing it out into the open . |
21 | and these ladies used to tell us all about his and try and bring us up into a clean way of life , which was n't bad , was n't bad at all . |
22 | Is actually to terrify the p poor and to drive them in into a s an under and this is part of their philosophy that they 've been following since nineteen seventy nine under Mrs Thatcher . |
23 | He untwisted the wire and straightened it out into a piece about a yard long . |
24 | Keep listening until you are sure that you will recognise the sounds the next time you hear them , then withdraw the spade and push it back into the ground some feet away . |
25 | Any second now it would break and throw him back into the river . |
26 | The new novel has married the pair and moved them on into the mid-Sixties and from the provinces to London , where Patrick works misgivingly in a fashionable publishing-house . |
27 | Then lift the front foot high and hook it back into the opponent 's head . |
28 | sure but again I mean if there was a market for this I am sure that to take that and splinter it off into a unit it costs money to get people that want to come into this business |
29 | Strong hands turned him round and helped him out into the street again . |
30 | Strong hands turned Soapy round and helped him out into the street again . |