Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb -s] [adv prt] into [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 And she goes out into the street and she pulls her skirt up .
2 She looks up into the sky in the direction of Ol Doinyo Lengai .
3 She reaches over into the back and grabs a couple of cans from the crate lying on the back seat next to his peaked cap .
4 She laughs and throws the duvet at me , and I sit back on the sofa-bed as she slips out into the hall .
5 As she stalks off into the night .
6 it goes back into the washer
7 Huge sums of money were generated by the World Cup and it is of the greatest importance that most of it goes back into the game and its development .
8 So he goes out into the storm and into wild nature , together with ‘ the wolf and the owl ’ , while his daughters and son-in-law close their doors on him ( 306ff . ) .
9 He looks down into the gardens hidden everywhere behind the patched and crumbling walls .
10 Nor does it have much of a view , since it looks down into the stable .
11 At the top the beetles have discovered the dead mouse ; they bury it by tunnelling beneath it and removing the earth from below so that it drops down into the excavation ; at the bottom as the mouse sinks down into the earth the beetles roll it into a ball ready for the reception of their eggs .
12 And yet he stumbles back into the crap rap trap between every number .
13 I have gone into this rather lengthy description for two reasons : one , because it leads back into the folklore of the November Owl Pie , and two , because I ca n't stand the blighters at any price .
14 He stays on into the dawn — how quiet
15 But er , ah , you know , it gets up into the garden but I do n't think it , it 's got anywhere near the house er this time , cos I was up there on Thursday and I , you could see where it had been , but it was and I mi I 'd have got very worried about er
16 Gutters will overflow , often by no means gently and valley water can back up under tiles and underfelt , until it spills over into the room below .
17 It 's okay in cold water , but when you heat it up it breaks down into the carbonate , C A C O three .
18 It surges up into the grounds of the fabled castle , into the cold and weary magic of Schloss Hartheim .
19 There it has a store of food and a nest of grass and other materials in which it curls up into a ball , tucking in extremities .
20 But the smoke is fragrant , it curls up into the perfume of jasmine or climbing roses somewhere behind by the cottage door .
21 If he gets back into the England team it will be deservedly so . ’
22 For every year at midwinter the sun grows weak and pale , and he sinks down into the marshes to spend the long winter night there , and Mokosh , the old witch , his foster-mother , nurses him until he is strong again , with herbs and spells and incantations .
23 Then it steps out into the world .
24 ‘ Happy Christmas , ma'am , ’ the postman says and , as he steps back into the darkness , she notices he 's wearing gloves .
25 He steps back into the caravan , staring hard at me .
26 This is erm a warm current , small current , but nearby there is a big excursion of warm water wells up , and we 're not very sure why , but it extends out into the Pacific .
27 The polysacurised component of composed of a four region to which the lipids are attached , and that outer region is er , it extends out into the environment .
28 After a couple of hours rest , it runs off into the bush to find food for itself , and after only twenty-four hours it is able to fly .
29 He runs out into the corridor and collides with his friend Richard , who is carrying a chessboard , and the pieces scatter over the floor .
30 And on the bus : Every morning he comes out into the garden with his cup of tea and stands there , looking round .
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