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

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1 Wordsworth , on the other hand , placed more value on Nature as a religious and moral agent ; he began those speculations about the meaning and direction of his own life which eventually built up into The Prelude .
2 Most of them would not go on , but three were brave enough to go down into the valley .
3 He decided then and there to take the carrion off her and have it back for himself and so leaned out into the void and tilted into the wind towards her far below .
4 The presbyterians also had misgivings , and only came back into the system in 1838 when they were practically guaranteed control of their own schools within it .
5 And er he was back there ten days ago for some or other to see another customer and when he came , only got back into the country on Monday or Tuesday
6 Seven years … but still every now and then one of them will suddenly run out into the street screaming . ’
7 ‘ They have had their ins and outs and have all got back into the side , ’ he says .
8 You will be able to see the lush green streamer weed swaying in the current , and if you look carefully , letting your eyes adjust to the movement of the current and weed , preferably with the use of polaroid spectacles , you may see one or more black shapes that suddenly emerge from under the green ribbon , hover for a few seconds in the open water and then just as suddenly disappear back into the weed .
9 He supposed he 'd better go back into the ballroom .
10 In no other human discipline , not in philosophy , nor science , nor music , is it believed that there has been a particular revelation of God in history , so that that point in history is then necessarily taken up into the discipline .
11 An hour , and an hour perhaps to get back into the town — still plenty of time , as she had judged it , to catch the ten-forty-five for Bleasham .
12 Russell and Ann Mills ' flat is particularly impressive as it is located on the upper floor of the school 's west wing ( Plate 37 and Fig 53 ) and so extends up into the apex of the steeply-pitched roof .
13 Life is painful throughout , with only the briefest moments of relief — the hyacinth garden , the fishmen at Magnus Martyr , boating — all of which only lead back into the cycle of further ( often sexual ) pain .
14 When we turned off the gas , the milk immediately stopped boiling and gently subsided back into the pan .
15 While Hazel gazed , the wind slowly veered round into the west , as Cowslip had said it would , and brought the rain driving into the mouth of the hole .
16 Just to go out into the night can give a sense of this ; night is not empty darkness — the night can be warm , or stormy , still or windy , and the darkness is charged by this and has a changing life of its own .
17 Well , we just got out into the hallway where all these mothers were standing round and
18 And the easiest way to escape is just to slip back into the cockpit of a racing car .
19 But he admitted : ‘ It is a crashing diappointment for Rob because he had only just come back into the side — and his return coincided with two successive clean sheets . ’
20 He did not wait for the servants to open the doors , but just pushed through into the entrance hall , and then into the great ballroom where a score of painters and upholsterers were finishing a long night 's work during which they had transformed the ballroom into a silk-hung fantasy .
21 SO BBC1 's Trainer finally galloped off into the knacker 's yard , leaving nothing but the memory of bad acting and even worse scripts in its wake .
22 Sure , they are soon going off into the night , their lights flickering and fading , but it will be with dignity .
23 She was delighted at having the chance to work with one of the rock world 's most distinguished performers who had already branched out into the movie business .
24 Well , we had neither : the sun was already moving down into the west , making it difficult to judge depths by water colour , and the seas were definitely not moderate .
25 I was just getting back into the driving seat when there was a shout and a figure emerged from the gully about fifty metres above me .
26 How unlucky for poor old Cooper finally getting back into the side and then not lasting more than forty five minutes cos of that shoulder injury .
27 It had been a few years since I 'd ridden a bike but it 's like sex , providing you do n't fall off , you soon get back into the swing of it .
28 It 's when I , when I went to Poland it 's not two or three years , it was nineteen seventy three and I was , I was just coming in into the church and the one Witness was with me and we were going in er big town like Cracow , you know , we were going one way and there was a couple coming erm to meet us like you know in , in , in , on the road , and he was just wearing erm jeans and no shirt , but erm a big , big wooden cross on his chest just reaching really across his chest a wooden cross and then erm a safety pin in his nose and three safety pins attached to one another through his ears and this Witness with me walking down , she says just look at this couple and the girl was , wore the same dress she , she had the top on , you know , but again all sort of queer looking and she , this Witness with me , with me so , she said just look at the two that 's er coming aga to meet us and I said yes and I looked and I said look at the cross and she says yes , it used to be , they used to hang the criminals on the crosses and now the crosses hang on the criminals is n't that lovely , and now the cross is er all the criminals instead of the cross , oh yes
29 ‘ The window in the floor above flew down into the street , ’ he said .
30 ( Dana would never dream of doing such a thing — he would just take off into the void and somehow find his way around . )
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