Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] into a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | One can rarely dip into a Pollini recording as a series of edited highlights ( except perhaps as a demonstration of superlative digital execution ) , as he rarely ever plays ‘ for the moment ’ ; one is irresistibly drawn towards hearing the whole work , as only then does the integrity of his vision register with its fullest potency . |
2 | Now it is ‘ threatened ’ with privatisation it has suddenly blossomed into a loved institution bordering on heritage ’ — The Duchess of Devonshire . |
3 | I was even planning which tank I would be moving my 43 babies ( I had carefully counted the eggs ) to when they had grown up enough to go into a larger tank . |
4 | After an atmospheric Christmassy sequence slower than the rest , Arnold suddenly launches into a bold pastiche of West Indian pop music , steel band references and all . |
5 | Of this view of bilingualism , Martin-Jones ( 1991 : 50 ) writes : " As the empirical work in bilingual communities has developed , it has become clear that the languages within the communicative repertoire of bilingual minority groups do not necessarily fall into a neat pattern of complementary distribution across domains . " |
6 | But he still had the run of the train set , so he decided to return to the jolly exciting stuff about pirates and fairies , all rolled into a rollicking family film called Hook ( Odeon , Leicester Square , from 10 April ) . |
7 | And after a number of false dawns , it seems the private insurance industry will shortly be able to offer some sort of long term care insurance product — if it succeeds conventional health and social services could be put out to tender , and perhaps turned into a commercial operation . |
8 | Eventually Tim , Julie and Elizabeth and two other girls all moved into a shared house . |
9 | Ideally an entry which is at present only a cross-reference might be better made into a full entry , while the existing entries might be better turned into cross-references , and so on . |
10 | popular anger against inequalities in the distribution of food could be swiftly transferred into a grim determination to defeat the Hun , as became clear when the military stalemate broke in March 1918 . |
11 | Maybe Matthew would look at her with fresh eyes , realize that the innocent freckled little creature he used to take swimming ( or riding , or bicycling or something ) had suddenly grown into a beautiful woman . |
12 | They 're obviously going into a difficult area and if it breaks out into open conflict , there will be slight risk , but at the moment it 's fairly routine for us . |
13 | THE parents of a boy who suddenly withdrew into a silent world have been sent a message of support from the Queen . |
14 | It consisted of a map , a compass , a small rubber water bottle and some French , Dutch and German money , all packed into a little tin box which was then bulging in the breast pocket of my battle-dress . |
15 | This is all bundled into a 208-pin CLCC package which , in single chip applications will run on 3W ; 5W is needed to drive large external memory systems . |
16 | This is all bundled into a 208-pin CLCC package which , in single chip applications will run on 3W ; 5W is needed to drive large external memory systems . |
17 | Julius 's mouth suddenly set into a hard line that she remembered very well , and her nerves gave an involuntary quiver . |
18 | Bradford Northern8 WIGAN , whose mastery of the understatement off the field rivals total dominance on it , secured their third successive Stones Bitter Championship on Saturday in a performance which , after boiling over at the start , gently simmered into a nine-try rout . |
19 | Lewis was enjoying that Tuesday , the day on which Morse had suddenly spurted into a frenetic flurry of activity . |
20 | The illusion was only to precipitate into a historical fact — the proletariat 's birth and growth — history 's total meaning , to believe that history itself organized its own recovery , that the proletariat 's power would be its own suppression , the negation of the negation . |
21 | Eleanor 's lips suddenly relaxed into a secretive smile . |
22 | But there were others , he said , that for the moment should also stay outside VAT even though they ‘ perhaps fall into a different category — sewage and papers ’ . |
23 | Brutus says that if Caesar is crowned he will not only turn into a dangerous animal , but it will allow him to harm the public . |
24 | The light in the passageway suddenly brightened into a blazing radiance . |
25 | A septic tank is an open system and depends on being sited where it can eventually discharge into a natural watercourse or soakaway . |
26 | As I have argued elsewhere ( 1989 , pp. 169–71 ) , the temple functioned rather like a great medieval abbey , drawing and re-allocating large revenues from the surrounding area and thereby developing into a major centre of wealth and power . |
27 | The heaume or pot helmet appeared late in the twelfth century , eventually developing into a complete head covering . |
28 | By way of variation , though , she sang a simple setting of a poignant old Irish poem , which began in a lovely duet between her and Kellock , with drummer John Rae on bodhran , but eventually turned into a full-steam work out for the trio , which was completed by bass player Andy Mitchell . |
29 | Adams ( 1985b ) illustrates this kind of difficulty in showing how a subject with good vision in the right eye , but perception of light only in the left eye , could easily bump into a half-open door before realising it was there . |
30 | We were told later that the fraud was so enormous — a total of $10 million — that reconstruction was impossible , and that any money the majority shareholders could put in would soon disappear into a large hole . |