Example sentences of "a [noun] [to-vb] [pers pn] into [art] " in BNC.
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1 | Perhaps this was merely a ruse to trick them into a crossing at Forteviot . |
2 | A ceremony to swear him into the post was to have been held tomorrow . |
3 | Wise move : Breeders of barn owls will need a licence to release them into the wild from January to stop them being freed into unsuitable areas ill equipped for life in the wild . |
4 | Bell took light from the sun , a lamp or even a candle , and used a lens to focus it into a beam . |
5 | You will probably need to push or pull it to overcome a detent to move it into the macro position . |
6 | An attempt to lull him into a false sense of security . |
7 | One group dismissed the Prime Minister 's offer as an attempt to co-opt him into the ruling Chart Thai party and thus disarm his independent political ambitions . |
8 | Perhaps disappointingly , after all this thought to protection from viruses , we have not been seriously attacked : the worst that happened was an attempt to lead us into an adventure game . |
9 | In October of that year the King came to Compiègne as the guest of the Emperor and Empress , who both deployed all their charms in an attempt to woo him into a declaration of support for France . |
10 | This was directly aimed at the ‘ surplus countries ’ , especially Japan and Germany , and was an attempt to bind them into a system where they could not pile up persistent surpluses . |
11 | It was closed in 1782 , after which there was an attempt to convert it into a Pantheon for the new Italy . |
12 | Patients fear Hartington Road Family Health Clinic may still be under threat even though councillors rejected an application to turn it into a drug detoxification centre . |
13 | One doubts that this will catch on here but helps with an introduction to lead me into a number of important themes relating to culture and death education . |
14 | To prevent such a sequence of events the church must seek continual spiritual renewal ; deploy a high proportion of its members to work in the external constituency ; in McGavran 's terminology , to turn them into class two leaders and workers , i.e. ‘ members whose energies are primarily directed to serving and evangelising non-Christians in their ministry area in an effort to bring them into the Body of Christ ’ , and to establish new groups and plant new congregations . |