Example sentences of "[pers pn] have [verb] into [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 I had gone into partial shock .
2 But I 've called into other tax offices and they too can get on their video screen y th your history from your tax office .
3 My first task will be to listen to their needs , and then translate what I have heard into positive action . ’
4 Make sure you 've fixed into solid material behind plaster — use longer screws and wallplugs if not .
5 She had lapsed into gloomy self-absorption , perhaps in reaction to Golding 's interrogatory methods .
6 Somehow she had to get into grown-up territory .
7 The fact that we had ventured into disputed territory meant nothing to my father .
8 right , that 's it , you 've , you 've told me this three times and I 've told you several times as well , the , the Russians put everything they 've got into military technology , just because , just because their kids are still running around
9 What they 've come into common use .
10 They had wandered into Central Park , and Sally-Anne had pretended that they were simply another happy pair of young lovers .
11 By the middle of 1924 the Agitprop section of the Smolgubkom was openly declaring that both shefstvo and smychka were a farce in actuality because they had deteriorated into mass weekend outings to the countryside in search of illicit stills .
12 In particular they agreed that they had entered into private compensation deals with their larger investors , in contravention of a voluntary self-regulation agreement imposed by the government in December 1989 after the Recruit scandal [ for which see pp. 36463-64 ; 36589 ] , paying a total of 43,500 million yen ( about US$315,000,000 ) to 78 clients between March 1990 and March 1991 , to make up for trading losses resulting from their investment advice .
13 It will depend on the characteristic experiences of women and men at the time of its formulation , and on the way they have entered into philosophical discourse .
14 The student often becomes bored with the endless repetition of drills ; he is not necessarily able to transfer the patterns he has practised into creative communication outside a classroom situation ; and he does not necessarily know how and when it is appropriate to use the structures he has practised .
15 Like other groups it has diversified into fast food ( Happy Eater ) and hotels .
16 In the years since he 'd sunk into alcoholic indifference in the same job , which at his present age was less amazing .
17 It was almost as if he 'd vanished into thin air .
18 Certainly it would not have been a viable proposition if it had run into serious trouble within a year or so of its launch .
19 A statement from the company 's offices at Dartford said that because of the Arts Council cut it had to go into voluntary liquidation .
20 Chemists were even suspicious of physical methods of analysis ; but the convenience of the spectroscope meant that by the 1870s it had come into regular use , as we shall see later .
21 An Oxford graduate , he had moved into general management in manufacturing and then into international construction and consultancy from which he had been headhunted by Richard Addis , now one of his senior partners .
22 The matter gave him enormous regret , no doubt an unhappy situation whose solution lay in the lap of the all-merciful Allah ; nothing would give him greater pleasure than to return to Mr Laing his passport , which he had taken into nightly safekeeping only at the specific request of Mr Pyle .
23 At a Burns Night party , some months earlier , he had bumped into Norman Stone , the Regius Professor of Modern History at Oxford .
24 My most abiding memory will not be of the joy of the French , but the terrible sight of Pete Sampras ' face at the prize giving ceremony which looked as if he had come into intimate contact with an atom bomb .
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