Example sentences of "[pers pn] [adv] into the " in BNC.
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1 | As these are decorations and not toys , you can use glass or pearl-headed pins to make the halo , either pushing them right into the head like a wreath , or half-way in so that the halo stands away from the head . |
2 | In the ensuing panic zebras run in all directions , many of them right into the paws and jaws of another waiting lioness . |
3 | The new novel has married the pair and moved them on into the mid-Sixties and from the provinces to London , where Patrick works misgivingly in a fashionable publishing-house . |
4 | Coins and pots and pans and weapons and tools and horse tack jangled like a demented musical band , and each time someone fell , the clanging beast would sag , then lift the fallen back to their feet and sweep them on into the courtyard . |
5 | I think it opens up the child 's awareness to what 's available and what 's coming erm moves them on into the next century really . |
6 | Liquid crystals — these are able to store ingredients such as vitamin E and release them slowly into the skin for prolonged benefits . |
7 | Another chapter today would see me nicely into the second half of my story , and this evening I would talk to Crispin and get things sorted out with him . |
8 | His speed and Lachlan 's bull charge through the fight , drawing their own men after him in the vacuum of his passage , ran him and them down into the water as well . |
9 | It catapults grains of sand at passing ants in an attempt to knock them down into the pit and eat them . |
10 | And he had taken them down into the Southern Ocean , not as far as we were going , but far enough to be in amongst the ice , circumnavigating the whole land mass of Antarctica in waters no man had ever sailed before . |
11 | Then he led them down into the bloody cloud again . |
12 | So how does pancreatic lipase , an enzyme that knocks around in the essentially aqueous environment of the small intestine , get to grips with fats and oils and break them down into the glycerol and fatty acids that are readily absorbed by the lining of the gut ? |
13 | up until just six years ago crews unhappy about the weight of their cox would bring them down into the brewery for a spot of heavy labour — shovelling mash , to get their weight down . |
14 | In other words , there are marvellous projects going on which really stimulate the interest of everybody , and it 's , the Engineering Council 's still trying to push them along into the twenty first century itself . |
15 | A double bed with two entirely different types of springing to suit the needs of each partner exactly ; to ease them gently into the right positions to keep the spine relaxed and flexible ; to help lift the pressure off bones , muscles , tendons , nerve endings and joints . |
16 | Make six small balls out of the red marzipan trimmings , each about the size of a pea , and press them gently into the red base , spacing evenly apart . |
17 | Neaten the joins of the strips as you go along , and press them gently into the side of the cake with your fingers . |
18 | The old gentleman who was the owner of the shop encouraged me and helped me along into the business . |
19 | That thought should get them deeper into the Castle , which is the general idea … |
20 | Money has driven them deeper into the planet , money has brought them down in the world … |
21 | The air smelt dank and trapped despite the wind that poured past them , forcing them deeper into the solid darkness ahead . |
22 | For instance , I was able to witness the dogs ' problems first-hand as Melanie muzzled them and brought them together into the living room . |
23 | Now is the time to begin fitting them together into the jigsaw , to demonstrate a powerful result extending the invisible hand beyond perfect competition to circumstances under which a natural monopoly has an efficient output and pricing structure . |
24 | Then I got a clear view of the mink , which was grabbing tufts of grass in its mouth and dragging them backwards into the den . |
25 | She picked off two pale sticky little slugs and flicked them away into the weeds , then crouched over a clear patch of soil and started to pull apart their tangled cotton-thread roots . |
26 | Would you mind taking them through into the third-class refreshment room ? ’ |
27 | A burly serjeant-of-arms stopped them , asked their business , and grudgingly let them through into the main courtyard where they were halted by a steward who took them up into the main hall . |
28 | But this time we learned from our mistake , went after them with everything we had got and just pushed them through into the open sea . ’ |
29 | Those radicals ( among whom Gaitskell was , oddly , not numbered ) who wanted to abolish the public schools , or amalgamate them somehow into the maintained system , persuaded themselves for a time that if this were done , and if everyone had a chance to take the 11 + and compete for a place at a grammar school , then justice would have been done and educational standards would be secure . |
30 | I was a boy of about thirteen snows when my parents sent me away into the hills … to find my Wyakin . |