Example sentences of "[vb past] [pers pn] [adv] into [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Then he led them down into the bloody cloud again . |
2 | At last Cranston finished his further refreshment and , with Benedicta so close beside him his heart kept skipping for joy , Athelstan led them out into the great cleared area of Smithfield . |
3 | I wished everyone goodnight and he led me upstairs into a small dormitory room . |
4 | The new novel has married the pair and moved them on into the mid-Sixties and from the provinces to London , where Patrick works misgivingly in a fashionable publishing-house . |
5 | Britain 's rescue drew it deeper into the American orbit , though with the introduction of Marshall Aid to promote the economic recovery of Europe by means of financing balance of payments deficits , this was to a degree common to western European countries [ Milward , 1984 ] . |
6 | Before he could do anything more another wave lifted him high into the foam-filled wind , then dizzyingly dropped him down into a hole in the ocean . |
7 | This shocked her suddenly , shook her back into the real world and changed the entire course of the interview . |
8 | The process of demystifying the monarchy , necessary if it was to survive the second half of the twentieth century , turned it instead into a grand soap-opera , in which some minor members of the family seemed only too happy to play a demeaning part , one of the more absurd examples occurring when several of the Queen 's children took part in the television party-game show It 's A Knockout ! |
9 | She took the paper napkin from her lap and crunched it up into a tight ball , dropping it on to her plate . |
10 | ANGLER David Moor , 31 , hooked a 64 pound carp — British record is 51 pounds — then threw it back into a French lake . |
11 | Mr Edgar tried to get hold of the key , but she threw it quickly into the hottest part of the fire . |
12 | Shutt got the ball about 15 yards out and hammered it low into the right corner ( Nice goal Carl ) . |
13 | The next thing she knew , Miss Hardbroom had pulled her out of the pocket and plonked her unceremoniously into a high-sided glass jar . |
14 | I pressed the door shut , and pressed him back into the lighted room at the rear of the store . |
15 | In 1090 the lord of Montpellier exploited it even more successfully when he rose against his lord , the bishop of Maguelonne ; worried by William 's defection , the bishop bribed him back into the episcopal mouvance by extending his fief . |
16 | Endill followed him out into the biggest corridor he had ever seen . |
17 | She followed him back into the little harness store and sat down on a bench while he lit the paraffin stove which soon filled the room with its smell and heat . |
18 | She took the key from a hook by the kitchen door and they followed her out into a paved courtyard that was partly glazed over ; there were lounging chairs , potted plants and climbers , and a sizeable lily-pond with a fountain . |
19 | And he thrust her briskly into a small , book-lined room , and himself went on along a passage to the hall and the telephone , leaving the door open between them . |
20 | IN Britain the development of the railways followed the Industrial Revolution , accelerated its impact , and pressed it forward into a new phase . |
21 | But now the Magpies are on the march again , nine years after Keegan guided them back into the top flight before sensationally swapping fog on the Tyne for the sunshine of Spain . |
22 | Then Melinda kindly guided me outside into the harsh sunlight of the street . |
23 | His mouth twisted into a devastating smile , and he pulled her outside into the warm evening sunshine . |
24 | A tallish hummock loomed , and he pulled her down into the wet grass behind it . |
25 | The children pulled her irresistibly into a large square room at the back of the house whose floor was covered with a threadbare brown carpet . |
26 | I 'm saying that someone , having knocked Mr Hambro cold , dragged him across the path to the water , and shoved him firmly into the soft mud with his face under water , to die . ’ |
27 | Before the startled merchant could think of a reply , Cranston had taken Athelstan by the elbow and steered him out into the sun-baked street . |
28 | That pattern stuck in my head and gradually crystallized it out into a definite form , while the scenario was being prepared for me . |
29 | He led her out into the huge marble-floored foyer . |
30 | She led him straight into an old-fashioned kitchen where a coal range gave out a dull red glow . |