Example sentences of "[adv prt] into the [num ord] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | For example , a number of women 's issues arose as statistically significant differences , but instead of finding a discussion of these results the reader is swept along into the next batch of data . |
2 | The illegal payments scandal brought them down to earth with a bump and down into the 3rd division . |
3 | DESPITE forecasts last August that this would be the most competitive rugby league season in history , the only issues likely to be left in doubt tomorrow night are who will accompany Swinton down into the Second Division next season and the final line-up for the Premiership competitions . |
4 | Push tool down into the second stitch — the first stitch will slip behind the latch and you can ‘ crochet ’ the second stitch through the first . |
5 | Hewitt had only just broken through into the first team and gave a good account of himself in matches against Crewe and Chesterfield . |
6 | Wait until I let you through into the last cellar , and then I must take the keys back to the steward . |
7 | If you move through into the next room you 'll find the area you 're to work . |
8 | Now , thanks in no small measure to his own contribution to the Hampshire cause , he has one ; and the only disappointment is that the climax of the match was watched by only about 8000 people , as the weather caused it to be carried over into the second day . |
9 | Do not carry feelings of rejection from one situation over into the next . |
10 | That 's how we know he has n't slipped over into the next valley . |
11 | But then you come to the problem , erm , because for ninety four five , erm , the formula suggests that we would need less staff , that might seem a bit odd but the , the reason is that if you do indeed bring your target times down , then the amount of work which your passing over into the next year is er considerably less , erm than the amount of work which you passed over into this year , |
12 | We took off into the last of the evening sun in poor visibility and I do not recall seeing any of the aircraft that took-off in front of me rise in the evening murk , I was too busy putting the nose down and squeezing a bit more speed out of the lumbering Whitley as we cleared the boundary . |
13 | The oral tradition lived on into the nineteenth and twentieth centuries . |
14 | No other African became a bishop until well on into the twentieth century ! " |
15 | As the play blundered on into the second half , the Airdrie strategy was clear — to ignore any pretence of building attacks from the back of the team through to the midfield . |
16 | Firstly , the proportion of teachers who , having successfully completed the first year , stay on into the second in order to obtain the Certificate in Education ( FE ) is proving to be extremely high : for example , of the 1,128 candidates for the first year courses being offered in 1979–80 , no fewer than 1,024 moved into their second year in 1980–1 . |
17 | It occurs in a number of quite precise and extremely crucial contexts , from the Maccabean regime on into the first century A.D. Thus the High Priest at the period of Judas Maccabeus ( who died in 160 B.C. ) is referred to as a Zaddik and described as being ‘ a zealot for the law ’ . |
18 | It lingers on into the first moments of his wakefulness , leaving him unsure what world he 's really in . |
19 | Bowater 's retiring chairman , Norman Ireland , described the purchase as an ‘ exhilarating opportunity ’ and said trading in the last four months of 1992 had been good and this had carried on into the first two months of this year . |
20 | Most , in both categories , left after taking the School Certificate ( if not sooner ) , but a trickle went on into the sixth form and even to the universities . |
21 | They walked away , and the exhibit , full of inertia and its own importance , continued to slide and pump long after they had walked on into the next display . |
22 | The identification with the ‘ home town ’ ( furusato ) was carried on into the next , urban-born generation . |
23 | Such arguments over values , political or religious , were to go on into the next decade . |
24 | It is necessary for the efficiency of study , but dangerous in that you may let the ten minutes drift on into the next study period . |
25 | Boys flowed past them and on into the next gallery . |
26 | 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 . |
27 | Viola was beaming benevolently as she read on into the last column . |
28 | Climb up into the first lost valley viewing the towering cliffs of Sgor Chionasaid and Sgor a' Bhatain on either side . |
29 | the ones who are , who have seen it all before , and done it from last year , because they had to split a smaller section of them up into the first year . |
30 | It was Ossie who took Swindon up into the 1st division — or so he thought . |