Example sentences of "and [vb base] [adv prt] into the [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | We carried on for a few more yards , then retraced our steps down to the main level and back out into the sunshine . |
2 | I open the throttle a bit and head out into the sound , where the tide flows strongly and it is a favoured feeding place for auks . |
3 | Descend and head back into the forest going south-west then south to post 21 . |
4 | I take a deep breath and head back into the eye of the storm , careening down side-streets when police barricades and fire hoses block the main avenues . |
5 | I finish my tea and climb back into the Toyota . |
6 | Should any other fishermen ignore the warning of Hooper and sail out into the weather , they could find themselves drawn inexorably back to shore , even against the tide . |
7 | With any luck I 'd have time to dry my hair and dive back into the satin whatsits before he arrived . |
8 | Not to mention every day of the week when you climb on that evil machine and ride off into the sunset ! ’ |
9 | So , I 'll now lift up the the curtain and look out into the street and see if there is any sign of them . |
10 | In other words , the speaker can read his speech and look out into the audience at the same time . |
11 | So it 's very easy for bacteria , which are always present around the anus , to reach the usually bacteria-free urethra and travel up into the bladder where they multiply and irritate the bladder lining . |
12 | The horses lose interest and sashay off into the night . |
13 | Despite the older officers ' complaints , the level of job satisfaction — when they can set aside the paperwork and get out into the field — is high ( cf. |
14 | Other people follow suit and surge out into the space enclosed by the crowd . |
15 | But it was the ideal stuff to lay up against the sides of the hole and tramp down into the base , where it soaked up water like a loofah . |
16 | I turn round and go back into the station . |
17 | This awareness goes back a long time , and to Lace it we need to leave the field of folklore and go back into the realms of ancient philosophy . |
18 | I do n't want to ring the bell on myself and go back into the classroom just yet . ’ |
19 | About ten minutes later , we decide we 've cooled down sufficiently to be able to leave the men 's room and go back into the restaurant . |
20 | Whenever the circus came to a new town he used to dress up in his costume and go out into the streets with a clown on stilts and do a turn . |
21 | We dress up like bit-part players in an epic on Scott and go out into the night where the air bites clean and deep , and the snow crunches in that beautiful cold way . |
22 | The strange thing was that it did not occur to her then to follow the Way Out signs , leave the station and go out into the street where a taxi could be found . |
23 | So at baptism , the new Christian would be immersed and go down into the river or the immersion font in Burmese skirt and coat , and on emerging from the water be clothed with the three garments of a Burmese monk , only white in colour instead of saffron , this signing acceptance as a mature member of the religious community and the cleansing from sin . |
24 | The novelist and his wife cross themselves again and turn back into the night . |
25 | They want to move the whole competition — lock , stock and barrel — out of the province entirely and turn in into the Jersey Milk Cup . |
26 | What is apt to happen when we strike a solid is that a whole series of stress waves radiate from the point of impact and move off into the body of the material . |
27 | I shut the window and move back into the room . |
28 | Hearing what sounded like a muttered exclamation of fury at her elbow , Melissa looked around and saw Dora turn on her heel and march off into the orchard , where she stopped under an apple tree and stared up into the branches as if inspecting its heavy crop of fruit . |
29 | What would I have done , I would have asked her to er get out of the bed , walk towards me and come out into the hall way where she could have been looked after by one of the other officers , and al allow me to get on with my main task in hand . |
30 | Cadfael went to meet him , and the porter , who had heard the stir of arrival and come out into the doorway of his lodge , halted on the threshold , and left it to Cadfael as an elder of the house to take charge of the returned prisoner . |