Example sentences of "[adj] [adj] [noun sg] [verb] into the " in BNC.
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1 | The remaining yeast in the casks turns the residual sugars into alcohol while the natural gas produced escapes through a soft porous wooden peg knocked into the shive hole on top of the cask . |
2 | Another type of hot water control is a non-electric thermostatic valve fitted into the return pipe from the cylinder to the boiler . |
3 | For some 20–50 years there will be plenty of British natural gas fed into the pipeline for use in homes and industry . |
4 | The Lebanese national army moved into the Castle of St Louis in Sidon in 1985 . |
5 | In Italy , that means cloth from Biella , an ageing industrial town crumbling into the River Cervo on the edge of the Piedmontese Alps northwest of Milan . |
6 | On June 8 after an explosion on board the Norwegian supertanker , Mega Borg , 3,000,000 gallons of light crude oil spilled into the Gulf of Mexico 90 km south-east of Galveston , Texas , but was largely burnt off in a fire which was not extinguished until June 15 . |
7 | Snap crack as your thumbnail bit , then the fresh green smell gushed into the air . |
8 | For the life of her she could n't move and as Shirley left , her face alight with enquiry , Jenna motioned the tall dark stranger to come into the sitting-room . |
9 | Mr Yeltsin and President Leonid Kravchuk agreed during two telephone calls to suspend their respective decrees on taking control of the fleet and to establish a joint conciliatory commission to look into the problem . |
10 | We see a reversal of the role of consciousness and unconsciousness then in the first stanza , where the real conscious world slips into the background allowing this world of subliminality to predominate : |
11 | The epic duo turned and thought to see a Victorian high-wheeled hearse vanish into the storm . |
12 | Would the sound of that diabolical symphonic flush carry that diabolical symphonic flush carry into the Abbey and create a major embarrassment for the British Monarchy ? |
13 | Therese 's pure golden voice lifted into the air , up into the chandelier , effortless , joyful . |
14 | Furthermore , the evocation of " wayfaring " folk instead of the contemporary urban proletariat introduces into the discourse of the Report a sense of Englishness linked to a mythology of medieval organic ruralism . |
15 | And that this wealth was not locked in land or designated for heirs : it was fine fresh wealth coming into the great port of Liverpool by the month , by the week even , in the form of Ceylon tea , Indian jute , Irish coal — Mr Crump had an encyclopaedia of imports which he rattled off in diffident haste . |
16 | Inside the inn there is a fine old cupboard built into the wall and a court cupboard . |
17 | The RAAF using delayed action and other bombs on occasions delayed and confused Japanese column coming into the hills . |
18 | A large deep pit dug into the floor of one of the niches carved into the sides of the burial chamber was packed with offerings including beads made of shell , turquoise , quartz and amethyst crystals , lapis lazuli and a local form of amber , together with gilded sheetmetal masks and head ornaments and gold foil . |
19 | Not more than half an hour had passed when a little grey tractor chugged into the car park . |
20 | Then he blundered into the turning he wanted , limped down it and came face to face with the blank grey door leading into the four Turkey Pens . |
21 | ‘ Twelve o'clock ! ’ he called out as she stepped on to the pavement ; then he was gone , the little green car melding into the rest of the traffic and rapidly becoming lost to sight . |
22 | The Route : An obvious horizontal break runs into the toe of the buttress from the side ( about 30ft up ) , and it is logical to start from a little corner at the end of this . |
23 | With his cropped bony head hunched into the shoulders of his badge-covered leather jacket , a grubby towel under his arm , he looked an unlikely trainer , nothing like the smooth Mr Plumpton . |
24 | Then the mists heaved and Garvey reappeared , his arm round the traveller 's shoulders and that great generous smile beaming into the stranger 's face . |
25 | I want to point up examples of good practice which will enable a vulnerable elderly person to transfer into the group care setting , keeping a sense of identity and a family network intact , with the possibility that residential staff become part of the extended family network , or social support system . |
26 | Behind him there was a rumble as the great octagonal slab rose into the air , hung for a moment on one edge , and crashed down on the floor . |
27 | ‘ Well , some poor crazy feller broke into the Lodge last night and killed Dominic . |
28 | His long black scaled body rose into the air and fell upon the now swerving military vehicle . |
29 | And , looking down at the still-outstretched arm , the glazed and open eyes , the great scarlet pool soaking into the earth , she knew that it was a body , that he had gone for ever , that there was nothing she need fear from him ever again . |
30 | Here at the fault a ventilation shaft was being put up to the surface where it linked with a short low drift driven into the boulder clay near the foot of Kernal Crag . |