Example sentences of "[vb pp] it into a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ Cypress Hill are smoking funk , and they 've rolled it into a fat album featuring ‘ How I Could Just Kill A Man ’ and ‘ Hand On The Pump ’ . |
2 | Yes , it 's not , they 've turned it into a total university trained job erm , people have n't given award . |
3 | would have turned it into a distinct party separate from the Parliamentary Labour Party of which it formed nearly a halt Candidates were asked to avoid " commitments with other organisations of such a nature as to militate against their effectiveness as ILP Members of Parliament " . |
4 | In Manchester the handover has allowed it to offload heavy costs such as bridge maintenance , while in Sheffield the running of the tram system into British Midland 's station has turned it into a major transport terminus , which includes buses . |
5 | The château was empty , almost derelict , and they have turned it into a small hotel and restaurant . |
6 | If Knightshayes had been a really fine Victorian garden , you 'd have had to keep it as it was , but we 've turned it into a twentieth-century garden and that 's what the Trust has taken . |
7 | By the 1950s , The Ridges was the criminal ghetto of Newcastle , and by the 1970s a costly council manicure job had turned it into a free-fire zone . |
8 | Philip accepted my idea , and incorporated it into a memorable paper he gave to the Royal Archaeological Institute in 1955 ( published in Arch . |
9 | The bothy was in Pat 's family , and they 've made it into a lovely home . |
10 | With much love and labour , they have transformed it into a beautiful home which they are now pleased to share with their guests . |
11 | Originally a woodshed , the previous owners had converted it into a thatched extension that is now lined with books . |
12 | The President himself had transmuted it into a grand desire for peace . |
13 | RO : I would n't have put it into a closing school … |
14 | It 's ridiculous , she thought angrily ; he can bring tears to my eyes just by making me remember the simple things , like the way he reached out and unlocked the seatbelt for me — he 'd done it with one fluid gesture , no fumbling with it — how he had flung his jacket on to the back seat with the same faultless grace , how he 'd sauntered round the back of the car with a bemused smile when he 'd winkled it into a tight spot . |