Example sentences of "[vb infin] [adv prt] into the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 In their small hamlets drink was associated with Cossack brutality , when horsemen would swoop down into the Jewish shtetels after Easter and terrorize the people .
2 Without the moral strength of the New Thinking it will fall back into the old corruption .
3 I trust that the benefits which will accrue during this central development will carry over into the future developments by individual colleges and institutions as the process of devolution of unit writing and assessment is established .
4 The window was barred although it was possible to reach through and open the casement He preferred to sit there because in better weather he could see out into the Inner Ward and the White Tower .
5 When puppies for research were raised in isolation in laboratory , it was noticed that the ill-effects of such rearing could be somewhat offset by cutting a window into the side of their box so that they could see out into the busy laboratory .
6 Perhaps he could run back into the Romano-British Collection , gibbering .
7 These feelings can build up into the next repeat of the same interchange .
8 It should be explained that while the above three communities were primarily concerned with economic matters , it was always anticipated that the process of integrating economies would spill over into the political sphere .
9 The next message would spill over into the financial pages , though there is still a bit of theology — verses 4 to 8 .
10 She felt as if she could float up into the starry night .
11 He took it from her and placed it on her shoulders , and she had to fight an urge to simply lean back into the solid warmth of his powerful frame .
12 From the top you can go down into the old crater via a scree slope which , viewed from the other side , looks impossibly steep ( ’ I 'm never going down there ! ’ ) but is actually quite easy ( the descent is 600ft . ) .
13 that would go up into the forty percent
14 If Papandreou wishes to continue her righteous quest , she should go back into the smoke-filled rooms of the Bâtiment Berlaymont and re-package her proposals rationally .
15 I shall go back into the classical age of Greece only in so far as it is necessary in order to understand the later times .
16 Apart from Gatting , who is seen as a near-certainty for England 's winder tour of India , others who may come back into the international reckoning are Chris Broad , Alan Wells , Matthew Maynard and John Emburey , while Neil Foster ( another South African tourist ) might have been considered for the winter tour but for a knee injury which kept him out of the Essex side for the last part of the season .
17 but I said to him , I 'll go and buy vinyl and we can come back into the same position , and he ai n't no good at sticking vinyl up , I always go round with a bloody
18 The easiest way we can get back into the Social Chapter is to accept Maastricht , without Maastricht there is no Social Chapter , with Maastricht we can opt back in to the Social Chapter .
19 Even if I do get out into the outer cellar unbound , what can I do ?
20 They should get out into the real world .
21 I 'd built a cat flap in the flat door so he could get into the rest of the house and one more in the back door so that he could get out into the square yard of concrete which our landlord Nassim called our patio .
22 In a run down on the style of deference he anticipates ( which I note will stifle any critical point from ‘ below decks ’ ) , he talks about his length of tenure and how long it will be before he can ‘ escape back into the real world ’ .
23 ‘ It gave me something that I am sure I can put back into the local community , ’ he said .
24 It is necessary for the efficiency of study , but dangerous in that you may let the ten minutes drift on into the next study period .
25 Eventually , when the howling had subsided and the jackals had sloped off to the forest , the dogs would come back in , or they 'd wander off into the frosty night and not return until morning .
26 After another mile or so , Ellwood saw them pull off into the gated driveway of a hotel .
27 When you stayed away from me , I would try in vain to will you back beside me : then , long after the dinner I waited for you to share but had to eat alone , I would wander out into the stony streets , hoping to bump into you , to glimpse you sitting in a bar or on a park bench :
28 Plenty of men could n't settle back into the old ruts after the war .
29 Under certain circumstances indeed water would be taken upwards by the lift-for instance , if the bulk of the traffic was downwards and barges loaded to 65 tons , then each barge passing down would squeeze out into the top pond 3.150 cu. ft. ( or about ⅓ of a lock ) of water This however is an ideal case and the following statement shews the theoretical gain or loss of water which would occur in working out of these lifts .
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