Example sentences of "[noun sg] [verb] into the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | An abandoned truck , its snout rammed into the steep bank of a cut , caused me a moment 's panic . |
2 | Do n't expect Schedule Express to go into the fine details of resource management . |
3 | I would guess quite a bit of money goes into the local economy . |
4 | She had found an opportunity to creep into the large saloon at the front downstairs , where in the gloom created by the velvet curtains drawn across the windows she had seen that the large and ugly old-fashioned Queen Anne furniture was shrouded in sheets . |
5 | unc The numerator carried into the tenths column leaves a remainder which is carried into the hundredths column . |
6 | Hampstead somewhere , he thought , and then he might take the opportunity to slip into the big library at Swiss Cottage … |
7 | In the afternoon they would don chamois gloves and make aimless ritual drives into the Green Belt , in-laws glumly ensconced in the back-seat , stopping at the side of an arterial road to circulate solemnly a vacuum flask . |
8 | Each entry goes into the Grand Draw , so the more monthly competitions you enter , the greater your chances of winning . |
9 | Speaking at the company 's developers conference , Apple Computer Inc chairman John Sculley said he expects the company 's strong momentum to continue into the second half of the fiscal year , adding that among new products on the stocks are the speech recognition computer system code-named Caspar and the pen-based portable notebook . |
10 | An hour after the French Dragoon Sergeant and his horse had been broken and flensed by the canister another cavalryman rode into the bright midsummer sunshine . |
11 | Grief welled into the deep-set eyes and the reply , when it came , was unsteady and uttered through tightened lips . |
12 | WELCOME BACK : Labour goes into the general election holding only one seat in the entire Central South Region . |
13 | To the extent that such approaches may suggest the desirability of changing over to a counter-force nuclear policy , they escape from the moral frying-pan of counter-city targeting into the strategic fire of counter-force , which has the twin disadvantages that it might put a premium on first strike and that it would in any case result in frightful civilian losses . |
14 | The white Straker family had long disappeared , their genes and blood melded into the vigorous bodies of their freed slaves , and only the Straker name lived on to be given new dignity by Bonefish and his family . |
15 | Mansell was slow to start … and Williams team mate Ricardo Patrase got a flyer sneaking into the first bend ahead of the field . |
16 | A third figure swam into the blue-green fan of the mirror . |
17 | A mother and her two children had to have a hospital check up after their car crashed into the central reservation on the A19 . |
18 | Do not allow the horse to wander into the first fence . |
19 | The car veered into the outside lane . |
20 | John Prescott , the shadow transport secretary , said the announcement confirmed ‘ further delay , uncertainty and planning blight with the line 's completion pushed into the next century , not the end of the decade ’ . |
21 | As the centuries passed and the second coming receded into the remote future , it came more and more to be assumed that the final verdict could be pre-empted . |
22 | There was thus a source of tension built into the very heart of the new biology , a tension that was never resolved and would ultimately divide the life sciences into a chaos of competing disciplines . |
23 | A last desperate attempt to escape into the murky waters . |
24 | Fifteen minutes passed and no car turned into the shaded driveway . |
25 | The remnant strands of long white hair lay clumped and matted about the skull , and a stalk-like neck vanished into the white folds of her nightgown . |
26 | There is still a great deal for CAMRA to do to ensure that a wide-ranging and diversified brewing industry survives into the 20th century . |
27 | It is brought out clearly , and even contrasted with the Hebrew view , in the Epistle to the Hebrews , 9 : 25–6 : ‘ Nor yet that he should offer himself often , as the high priest entereth into the holy place every year with the blood of others ; For then must he often have suffered since the foundation of the world ; but now once in the end of the world hath he appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself . ’ |
28 | They introduced the festival of Martinmas ( 11th November ) and G. H. Burton alludes to the Irish custom of slaughtering an animal on St. Martin 's Day , suggesting it was an earlier pagan practice brought into the Christian calendar . |
29 | A short time later , a car pulled into the underground drive-through that had been set aside for taxis and pick-ups at the mainline rail terminus . |
30 | Now , his mouth clamped into the grim line she was familiar with . |