Example sentences of "[noun sg] [prep] [verb] [pron] into [art] " in BNC.

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1 Plainly , individual journalists have individual styles but ultimately they have to turn the result of meeting you into the type of article their publication requires .
2 He had no intention of getting himself into a stew about that .
3 They bought the building two years ago with the intention of turning it into an exhibition space for cultural exchanges between Europe ( mainly France ) and Japan .
4 She had recently killed some of Buddie 's hens and turkeys by gripping their necks between her teeth and shaking them violently from side to side before throwing them into the air .
5 Right form the start they get the club into the wrong position , meaning they have no hope of getting it into a good position afterwards .
6 He is a star who takes himself seriously and his method-acting technique of thinking himself into the part is legendary .
7 And he blamed another girl for getting him into the drugs scene .
8 Michael Burns , 31 , of Whorlton Road , Hardwick , Stockton , is accused of raping the girl after dragging her into an alleyway by the Newtown Social Club in Durham Road , Stockton .
9 There 's been talk on the council of turning it into a swimming pool , but they ca n't afford it .
10 Now PC Dave Fishwick has urged residents to check identification before allowing anyone into the house .
11 I do not try and cosset these over winter by placing them into a separate tank in the garage , reasoning that the survivors will be the toughest of the bunch and more likely to make up into sturdy adult fish : come spring , they are distributed to friends .
12 In his Commentaries on the Laws of England published over half a century before the 1870 Education Act , Blackstone wrote that ‘ it is not easy to imagine or allow that a parent has conferred any considerable benefit on his child by bringing him into the world , if he afterwards entirely neglects his culture and education , and suffers him to grow up like a mere beast , to lead a life useless to others and shameful to himself ’ .
13 But er we found a pair of jeans er and having made sure that the jeans were empty of anything , er we sort of shuffled himself into the jeans a he lay down and we pulled , I I pulled the jeans up .
14 ‘ But somehow that mistake sort of propelled me into an approach which is still very significant to what I do .
15 I suppose the trouble is yeah if you do push , if you do go for that the other side cos you just sort of push them into the
16 it 's not worth it because I 'm not gon na sort of get myself into a position where I 'm only likely , where in other words get a job as a bricklayer
17 ‘ The important thing is to avoid the danger of talking ourselves into a sense of almost terminal gloom .
18 We are in danger of talking ourselves into a deeper decline in which only the bad news is given attention .
19 ‘ Nothing , but you 're in danger of turning it into an art form .
20 In conversations snatched in the backs of taxis between meetings , and in office anterooms , Branson spoke about the process of turning himself into a public figure if the airline were to succeed , fully aware of the consequences .
21 He degrades the nobility of the place by turning it into a weekend retreat ; the human beings firmly under his sway — the Damsels , and the Artist — do not question his purpose , and he announces that his achievement will last for ever :
22 That June , Duran clamped Leonard 's artistry by drawing him into a slugging match in Montreal and inflicting on the American what was to be his only defeat in 37 contests .
23 She pulled out the kitchen trash hopper , a laundry-basket kind of affair on squeaky castors , and set Donald on his journey to duck heaven by dropping him into the grey plastic liner .
24 If you are well practised in a careful approach , having learned the art of blending yourself into the background and moving with the silence and stealth of a hungry alley-cat , then you will soon be close enough to identify them as chub .
25 This quest for the singular , the contingent event which by definition refuses all conceptualization , can clearly be related to the project of constructing a form of knowledge that respects the other without absorbing it into the same .
26 Despite being repeatedly arrested and brought back home , bruised and beaten by the police , she finally got to see the King by throwing herself into the road in front of the Royal car .
27 Sentencing McPherson , the judge , Lord Cameron , said he accepted that McPherson had been in some part less responsible for the violence to Mr O'Donnell that evening , but added : ‘ Nevertheless you played a full part in luring him into the hands of those who were responsible for repeated acts of a bizarre and terrible character upon him . ’
28 When Eric Liddell could wish his rivals good luck before grinding them into the track , and a National Hunt jockey would slow down to help a fellow rider back into the saddle .
29 ‘ He died cursing your father for trapping him into a loveless marriage , ’ he growled .
30 So , for perfect results , reduce everything to the lowest common denominator before putting it into the press .
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