Example sentences of "[noun pl] [verb] [adv prt] into [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Such conflicts spilled over into the immediate postwar phase .
2 Videos of the revolution are screened on to a side wall of the Architecture School and the sounds of the 1989 crowds blasted out into the icy night .
3 In Sutton , the wires came out into the High Street and ran a short distance to the right to run round a small green at Bushey Road .
4 These matters spilled over into the British Psychological Society and eventually in 1951–52 led to a major row on the benefits of psychoanalysis , which meant that the relationship between scientific developments and educational practice became further confused .
5 The officiant 's sepulchral tones waft out into the darkened hall .
6 His face , to be sure , is not built for mirth : framed by luxuriant , shoulder-length black hair , his chubbyish cheeks curve round into a pinched mouth which makes him resemble Roshan Seth , the Indian actor who played the hero 's vodka-sodden father in My Beautiful Laundrette .
7 Within the broad categories of usage above , the applications broke down into a wide range of tasks .
8 The tumbling waters fan out into a small and shallow lake of coated stagnant water .
9 Fireworks burst up into the dark sky , then fizz to nothing .
10 Huge flurries of snow and feathers as his 20 panicked concubines flew up into the surrounding trees .
11 The wooden stairs led down into a narrow corridor illuminated by a single naked bulb dangling at the end of a piece of frayed flex .
12 A front leg-stretching exercise : from a walking stance throw up the leg , keeping the knee joint locked and toes pulled back into a high position .
13 The mowers went out into the little fields of wheat and oats , and the sheaves stood yellow in the stubble .
14 Her passengers hurried down into the empty hold , where the roof of the Alice was splitting into two .
15 These protein molecules curl up into a particular shape determined by their own amino-acid sequence , which in turn is governed by the DNA code sequence of the gene G. When G mutates , the change makes a crucial difference to the amino-acid sequence normally specified by the gene G , and hence to the coiled-up shape of the protein molecule .
16 They may have been killed by the giants ; they may have starved to death ; all the men of the Armada remembered were the pitiful wails of the pair echoing over the still waters as the ships sailed back into the open sea , and south .
17 The players brought out into the open the threats they have received , and I have also suffered them .
18 ‘ When a sewer is damaged and hydraulically overloaded , internal water pressure forces water out into the surrounding ground : when the pressure falls the water re-enters the sewer , bringing silt with it , thus clogging the pipe and , more important , weakening the external support , thus accelerating the failure .
19 The ILP certainly broke up , but most of its members went back into the Labour Party .
20 This can be effectively reinforced by ‘ necking down ’ the junction , with pavements swelling out into the former roadway to reduce both vehicle speeds and the crossing width of the street for walkers .
21 Spurned by the Press , subject to unprovoked and vicious assaults by immigrants and policemen alike , denied gainful or meaningful employment by a heartless State , barred from the domestic hearth by severe , unyielding parents , the skinheads often see themselves as victims of almost Biblical proportions — as a stricken race of Jobs , as modern wanderers cast out into a cheerless world …
22 Telegraph poles push up into the living quarters protecting folk from the fickle rising seas .
23 Some of our juniors had success towards the end of the year , and our men getting back into the top group of the Davis Cup was a great boost .
24 The long yellow stamens of their red flowers spit out into the hot air , searching for the least drop of moisture .
25 More opportunities for individual and small group Work in the infant schools would make it more likely that children will achieve fluency in reading early enough to prevent the rejection of learning which so often accompa-nies failure as children move on into the older primary classes .
26 Although these broader issues spill over into the whole question of extending the notion of the sociolinguistic variable into the domain of syntactic analysis , they are relevant to data collection because they often entail difficulties in obtaining sufficient quantities of a specific type of data .
27 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 .
28 But we must not forget the great flysch troughs which were developed in Alpine Europe through much of Cretaceous time and which in many cases continued on into the Tertiary .
29 Landing feet first , I broke only partway through the crust , so that nothing but my boots plunged down into the softer material beneath .
30 This does not add much to the cost of the order , and over a period of time the extra components build up into a useful stock of parts .
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