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

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1 Not so long ago , a haulage company would send its drivers out into the world with few opportunities to communicate with then until they returned .
2 Some boys were bringing battered wooden buckets up from the well and the occasional housewife emptied the slops from the night jars out into the middle of the street .
3 Sharply reduced reserves — often 50% of 1990 levels — have not lured buyers back into the market for second- and third-rate works .
4 But they were forced by bad weather to abandon their efforts to entice the marooned males out into the safety of deep water .
5 There were a couple of queues out into the street for toiletries .
6 Coming down from the Col de la Pierre-Saint-Martin there is no need to drive back the way you came , through Arette , because five miles from the top you can fork off to the right and come down in sylvan splendour through the very heart of the Forêt d'lssaux , before either turning sharp left down the valley of the Lourdios and a not very good road to Issor , or carrying straight on to follow one of two better , more or less interchangeable roads back into the valley of the Aspe near Bedous .
7 His concern was echoed in a BBC Panorama investigation Only Fools And Horses ? on Monday in which it was claimed that off-course bookies must pour more of their profits back into the Sport of Kings — or it could die .
8 We 're trying to get big , local companies to plough some of their profits back into the community through the work of the YMCA . ’
9 Cockburn himself was one of those whose reappraisal led to East Lothian becoming a notable region for agricultural reformers , ploughing their profits back into the improvement of the earth .
10 Amongst its advantages were a series of paid watchers who warned of approaching police , as well as numerous exits out into the warren of houses and warehouses that backed onto the Thames .
11 Although I believe that hysteria , as classically defined , can provide only a part of the answer to the problem of anorexia nervosa , it is a starting-point and , in the light of Szasz 's observation that ‘ hysterical conversion is best regarded as a process of translation , ’ I propose to translate the history of my own symptoms back into the language in which they were intended to be expressed .
12 I 've also broken the smaller ones down into the cost for the still and the carbonated water .
13 This is the time when a professional knows he has to cut sentimental connections and kick close friends and women back into the world of clerks and shopkeepers .
14 It therefore does n't offer any ventilation bonus like an open fire does , but it has the advantage that it does n't suffer from back-draughts , which can blow smoke and fumes back into the room from open flues .
15 The peninsula projects a good five miles out into the Channel from the Dorset coastline .
16 * Southern Japanese fishermen drove about 1,000 dolphins back into the sea after having been informed by the government that they were rare Fraser 's dolphins .
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