Example sentences of "into the [noun] [adv] [adv] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 I 'm carrying you because you need to get back into the warmth as fast as possible , and this is quicker than letting you walk by yourself . ’
2 The SATs , it was argued , should be integrated into the curriculum as far as possible using a wide variety of practical tasks and observations .
3 This one act of his expelled him into the wilderness more forcibly than any other , just as it did the novelist George Gissing in England .
4 The opportunity to go away from the school and work in a different atmosphere and with people who might have a different perspective on the management of organizations would give me the chance to look back into the school more objectively and question some of the assumptions I had grown to accept .
5 The random roof lines and the use of local materials enable it to fit into the hillside as organically as White had planned .
6 And it 's not fair to say it 's because of the beard because the beard 's not my fault , they just did n't shave in the jungle in whatever century it 's going to be when we get there and I know I grew it early but that 's the way I am , I like to start thinking myself into the part as soon as possible .
7 IN the Dales , history and legend are welded into the landscape as firmly as the rocks beneath .
8 Almost before the mooring was completed the beaching party were towing out the beaching legs in order to get the aircraft into the hangar as soon as possible .
9 Conditions are jolly hot there , and they 're going to have to get used to that quite quickly , the big thing is to get them through and out into the desert as quickly as possible .
10 He ran into the water almost headlong and paddled over fast , leaving an arrow-head ripple on the calm , brown surface .
11 When you catch a fish , or get a strikeable bite and miss it , you should cast a bait back into the water as quickly as possible .
12 Riven was already thinking of bright hearths and warm beds as they made their way along the summits , following Bicker in single file now , their mounts ' hoofs throwing up bobbles of snow that were swept away into the air as quickly as they were kicked up .
13 I fell to the ground in great pain , and the man and the girl ran into the woods as fast as they could , and left me .
14 A further great grievance that exists in this force in the Division where I am is that the Section Sergeant dare not enter any Station while he is on duty unless he signs the main station book ; yet the plain clothes P.C.s and Detective Constables , and even uniform P.C.s can go into the Station as often as they think and there is no order that any of them must sign in and out .
15 I am quite clear that I shall have to go into the evidence very carefully when the police report is available to me .
16 She began plunging the pole down into the pot once more but , feeling suddenly rebellious , she stopped work and went outside for a breath of fresh air .
17 A few minutes later Nathan jumped down into the cockpit once more and hauled out the roller-reefed headsail .
18 He had noticed , for example , that Dr Ali always accompanied the Prophet 's name with the formula 'may God bless him and grant him peace ! ’ and , often , in the doctor 's presence , Robert would work Muhammad 's name into the conversation precisely so that he , too , could repeat the traditional blessing .
19 ‘ As soon as they get the ball , their intention is to get it into the box as quickly as possible and to finish with a shot .
20 The earl read aloud , translating into the vernacular as fluently as any cleric : Ye shall seek me , and shall not find me ; and where I am , thither ye can not come . ’ '
21 He got out of the building and into the street as quickly as he could .
22 That what the inspector 's been telling us year after year , that we are in serious danger of not coming up to the protection safety standards , is something that we ca n't push into the background any longer and I 'm very glad it 's come to the full council so that the whole council can take it seriously the public protection committee has taken it seriously for a very long time .
23 She reached for her pen and dipped it into the well so fiercely that when she lifted it a blot fell across the page .
24 Interestingly , Harry had come into the game unusually late because he was already 24-years-old when chief scout Charlie Slade spotted him playing for .
25 But it it 's sort of built into the ground apparently so that it 'd be pretty low down .
26 Yet all that feeling , all that energy , discharged itself into the void so long as it did not flow down one of the channels that made the great wheels turn — in Edinburgh , in London and Paris .
27 Titles that Whitaker learns about after publication to into the list as soon as possible .
28 She resented the way in which he seemed to be taking over , insinuating himself into the family as cunningly as he once had in Oxford .
29 Their problems are so deep and the solutions will take so long that it will hold back political and economic progress in western Europe if we insist that they are brought into the fold sooner rather than later .
30 He was staring into the fire rather grimly and she had to take her courage firmly in hand .
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