Example sentences of "have [verb] into [art] [noun] [unc] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Once a tiny fishing village , this town has blossomed into the country 's most popular beach resort , with people taking full advantage of the excellent beaches and vibrant nightlife .
2 Today UAPT-Infolink plc has grown into the UK 's leading independent credit information organisation .
3 The dispute between Australia 's 1,700 pilots and the airlines has turned into the country 's most bitter industrial confrontation for many years .
4 Government money has poured into the UKAEA 's coffers .
5 ‘ I 'd popped into the chemist 's .
6 After the violent conditions that erm we think occurred in the early life of the earth and injected energy and churned up the atmosphere and formed the prebiotic molecules , we find that just those same molecules are actually in the clouds in space , and these clouds are the basic raw material from which stars and plants form in the first place , so we might ask the question could they have got into the earth 's atmosphere without this intermediate process , and I think there are mechanisms whereby these molecules can accrete into the earth 's atmosphere , and it certainly suggests that we should look at thse and certainly not be taken as a foregone conclusion that the Uray/Miller experiments are the only mechanism whereby the prebiotic soup was formed .
7 Yes I think that may be right my Lord , indeed er if we succeed on the way out , get get out of the contract point then of course the plaintiff 's case is that they would have taken that advice and would not have entered into the contract a and therefore on that basis they are entitled to be compensated on the basis that all the losses they unnecessarily incurred by having , being forced to complete , should be recoverable , subject to er litigation of loss and .
8 After some uneventful voyages over the years , and at least seven previous masters , the Orynthia seemed to have turned into a hornets ' nest .
9 He and nine accomplices were said to have hacked into a bank 's computer and gained access to the Treasury 's accounts .
10 Later the same year he was appointed to the custody of various Welsh castles and honours which had come into the king 's hands on the death of George de Cantilupe [ q.v . ] .
11 In 1281 he was commissioned by the king to search the chirograph chests for all deeds relating to Jewish debts , which had come into the king 's hands through the forfeiture of the creditors concerned , and then to levy those debts for the king .
12 ’ A note of uncertainty had crept into the wolves ' voices .
13 Ruth had already decided to bring her own children to be photographed today , and then approached all her friends with young families , suggesting they might like to do the same — so it had turned into a children 's party .
14 And then he discomfited her utterly by keeping that silence until he had turned into the Hamiltons ' driveway , switched off the engine , and opened the boot to retrieve her luggage .
15 From 1971 to 1977 he had also been " Head of Wasdale " , a former one-roomed schoolhouse in the Lake District which he had transformed into the School 's Outdoor Pursuits Centre , guided by seven years ' experience on the Corsica trips between 1966 and 1972 .
16 Accountability is not confined to policy matters , as William Whitelaw found when he had to report to an astonished House of Commons that an intruder had got into the Queen 's bedroom at Buckingham Palace .
17 YOU only had to walk into the members ' lobby of the Commons yesterday to know what you 'd suspected for days .
18 If you had to walk into the lion 's den , better have someone on your side .
19 A pleasant flight had deteriorated into every pilot 's nightmare .
20 Blundstone boots are showing no signs of receding and back in their birthplace of Hobart , Tasmania , they 've walked into the city 's art gallery which displays 35 Oz artists ' response to ‘ Do Something With A Blundstone ’ .
21 When they had emerged into the station 's corridors , Ace had stood alone , her arms crossed and her lips tight , occasionally cursing as an android nudged her .
22 ‘ Revelations ’ from a bitter ex-valet branded her a tyrant with a heated temper who had swept into the Prince 's life and , like a spoilt child , banished trusted staff and old friends and even stopped the Prince from hunting and shooting .
23 Peacock , who had not yet left the palace after dining with the King , noticed that the Prime Minister had gone into the King 's room like a shattered man-'scared and unbalanced' was Wigram 's phrase- and emerged with head erect and confidence restored .
24 Perhaps he had run into a pensioners ' outing .
25 Detchard had run into the King 's room and locked the door behind him .
26 The court was told that Gambrill had climbed into the girl 's bunk bed while babysitting and tried to have sex with her .
27 Yet , within a few years , the whole affair had degenerated into a foodies ' free-for-all .
28 He had drifted into the Colonel 's orbit .
29 Er , Madam Speaker I 'm very much aware of the case that the my honourable friend has er mentioned because he has written to me er about it and I have looked into the circumstances er of it and I understand that the employment service have made no final decision on that particular site and I 'd be happy to respond to my honourable friend er once I 've had a chance to discuss it further with the Chief Executive of the employment service whose responsibility it is but if I could just say to my honourable friend the principle of integrating er the work of the job centre and the payment of benefits on one site is a good one which is for the convenience of er people who make use of the job centres er and er as er er the honourable er gentleman , the member for Workington is indicating from a sedentary position , was a recommendation which was supported by the public accounts er committee and I believe and I believe that it er makes sense to proceed on a value for money basis with this policy but I will certainly look at the particular example in my honourable friend 's constituency with interest .
30 The lien of a solicitors ' firm over clients ' papers pending payment of its costs will not be lost by a change in membership so long as the papers have come into the firm 's possession before the change : they can not ( subject always to any specific arrangements with the client to the contrary ) lawfully be retained after such a change in respect of a debt falling due before that event .
  Next page