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

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1 Before returning , a look down into the tremendous ravine of Ling Gill below the bridge will reveal a most impressive scene , the beck hurrying along a bouldery bed fringed by trees and cliffs on its way to join the Ribble ; several minor caves have been found and explored along its banks but the rough terrain is a deterrent to walkers who prefer to travel sedately .
2 ‘ Where are we going now ? ’ she asked as he swung the car back into the main street .
3 They both clambered aboard and the man pulled the boat out into the main current .
4 She threads the Monster back into the high chair where it stiffens , collapses forward , stiffens again , slides down to the crutch-stop and lies there half under the tray , flailing its arms and legs like a crab on its back … and howling — howling like the hell-sent creature it is .
5 Close inspection reveals that mean smoothing creates relatively large residuals in months adjacent to the strikingly atypical months , where perhaps common sense would suggest otherwise ; if the percentage in February 1985 represents some kind of error , for example , then the less resistant mean has spread this error over into the adjacent months .
6 Once , he chased a young girl up into the Milky Way .
7 Perhaps , though , his greatest achievement , was in leading tennis back into the Olympic Games for the first time since 1924 .
8 He lifted Leonora into the passenger-seat then leapt up to back the vehicle out into the narrow street , waving his thanks as a weather-beaten old man slammed the garage door shut with a wide smile before waving them on their way .
9 Push tool down into the second stitch — the first stitch will slip behind the latch and you can ‘ crochet ’ the second stitch through the first .
10 Beyond this palace , turn to your right down into the Italian quarter by following the stairs of St John 's Hill ( Jánský vršek ) to the bottom .
11 But in 1956 Arkell changed his mind and ( partly , one suspects , for the sake of tidiness ) pushed the Callovian down into the Middle Jurassic .
12 Geographical proximity meant that these relations have continued to be of crucial importance through into the post-1945 period .
13 Many scorned it but rapturous press reviews helped push the record up into the high altitudes of the independent chart .
14 The volatile Scot , currently on a month 's loan to Birmingham City after being transfer-listed by Southampton , lines up against Newcastle with an eye on a move back into the Premier League .
15 We have done exactly what I wanted us to do — brought a great singer back into the difficult world of the performer .
16 She had urged her husband out into the large society in and about Liverpool but the forays had not been happy .
17 Success has n't solved all their problems — Cindy Wilson has taken time off to be temporarily replaced by David Lynch 's protegee Julee Cruise — but it has put the bounce back into the bouffant bop from which their name is derived ( a B-52 being a hairdo ) .
18 He tucked the ticket down into the top pocket of his official tunic .
19 I swung down at the bottom , deciding to go head first , face up , curling my back down into the soft river bed , praying …
20 He climbed on one side of the desks , stood on tiptoe , and , forcing up the skylight , eased his head through into the icy December wind .
21 One takes a high level reservoir and if there is more electricity available than the demand requires , then some of that can be used to pump water up into the high level down .
22 PC Thomas Hewett turned to follow the landlord back into the public house .
23 The girl stuck her head out into the main office and called across the room .
24 An assertiveness training programme involves a number of stages : first , understanding the underlying principles of the approach ; second , recognizing different styles of communicating ( passive , aggressive , assertive ) , third , identifying specific situations where we would like to be more assertive , whether at work , in public , among friends , or at home ; fourth , to prepare , rehearse , or role play a different , more assertive response ; and fifth , to transfer that behaviour back into the real world .
25 Once they had left the shop and collected their horses , Athelstan and Cranston rode as fast as they could up Piper Alley back into the main thoroughfare .
26 Pruning cuts out damaged and diseased branches , thus averting the spread of decay , while at the same time rechannelling the vital sap back into the productive parts of the plant .
27 Again she ignored him , doing amazingly well at steering the canoe out into the still waters of the lake .
28 Initially it is likely to get the Sbus versions of Freedom out into the Sparc-compatible market , and says it has already been approached by several of those suppliers .
29 The locals , realising an opportunity when they saw one , ploughed increasing amounts of money back into the aspiring town and today the results are there for all to see .
30 The galley pulled away , its oars dipping as it made its way down , following the tide out into the open sea .
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