Example sentences of "[adv prt] into [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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31 The basic solution is first to restrict the flow of water percolating down into the aquifers by planting trees , preferably native species , on the higher ground .
32 The lower side of the film is softened and , as the solvent evaporates , the film settles down into the irregularities of the etched face and produces the replica .
33 The fighting continued , spreading off the great curve of the ramparts down into the buildings below .
34 With this intention firmly planted in her mind , she headed for the back stairs leading down into the kitchens .
35 Reconsider this planned essay with the introduction broken down into the parts as suggested .
36 Sometimes I 'd watch their kites going down into the fields overhead , down until they dwindled away out of sight , long before they reached the tops of the trees You ca n't do that often , though , because of all the smog .
37 Clearing out all the manure into the er big heap down into the fields where you wanted to spread them next Winter .
38 And for a moment they strained together , their breathing harsh , uneven , then with a sudden movement he rolled on top of her , his weight crushing her down into the grasses .
39 A twisting road led down into the bushes , and the Doctor set off down it .
40 But it was getting out of those beta-waves , down into the alpha-waves and into what is called the fifth state of consciousness — the healing state — that was so difficult .
41 I repeat that in the past 10 years there has been a devolution of power down into the regions right across Europe , not only inside the EC .
42 Along its length was a thread of blue light , which widened , widened , as the two halves of the roof retracted , rumbling gently down into the walls .
43 Winter cereals are slow to establish , and must be sown earlier : this is apparently because there is a tendency for stubble or killed turf to be pushed down into the slits with the seed where it can create anaerobic conditions leading to the formation of toxic substances such as acetic acid .
44 For a while he tried to read , tried to sink back down into the fortunes of young Pao-yu and his beloved cousin , Tai-yu , but it was no good ; his mind kept returning to the question of the Aristotle File and what it might mean for Chung Kuo .
45 On one occasion a team of five men went down into the tunnels for which purpose they had to pass through the line of empty stabled cars .
46 Some geezer got down into the tunnels and found his way out . ’
47 For every year at midwinter the sun grows weak and pale , and he sinks down into the marshes to spend the long winter night there , and Mokosh , the old witch , his foster-mother , nurses him until he is strong again , with herbs and spells and incantations .
48 He turned his head away , pressed forehead and eyes hard down into the covers of Fanny Hill .
49 The official justification is that in Bali the company could work with local performers and learn to ‘ shift our centres of gravity away from the head , down into the centres of our bodies ’ .
50 Occasional evidence of this percolates through into the newspapers and , now and again , the law reports .
51 The lake of liquid peat had burst through into the workings beneath it and was deluging into the colliery .
52 It was two minutes past midnight when he walked through into the Chapters Bar , where a dozen or so late-night ( early-morning ) drinkers were still happily signing bills .
53 We bought our tickets and went through into the grounds , sitting down just inside to admire .
54 Go through into the cloisters .
55 Cardiff pushed through into the offices .
56 The rationing of the household in the labour market spills over into the goods market by constraining the household 's demand for goods .
57 We were a finely balanced investment , threatening constantly to topple over into the realms of demand and expenditure .
58 Long before they had passed the watershed and were looking over into the jaws of the mountains at the head of Loch Morar , young Angus felt he had strayed into a foreign country .
59 Further , some at least of the influential individuals in a community may operate outside the field of industrial relations : drawing on the work of Blauner ( 1960 ) , Bulmer suggests that the strong occupational communities characteristic of mining settlements occur because the social relations forged in the workplace are carried over into the arenas of non-work activity , creating overlapping primary group affiliations in which
60 If this process went on unchecked it should lead to an increasing ripple height , but , as the ripple crests rise , they increasingly interfere with the wind , so that the sand grains on the crests are blown over into the troughs .
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