Example sentences of "[v-ing] [adv prt] into [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Minutes later , Rachel was running out on to the road , hailing a taxi and driving off into Central .
2 The unknown is always the most fearsome , opening out into wide areas of conjecture .
3 Her hand strayed to touch his short thick hair , a small yelp of surprise escaping her as her wrist was grasped by strong fingers and she found herself looking down into alert blue eyes .
4 Beyond it , the mild night sky was busy with lights arrowing down into National airport and jinking up away from it , following the curls of the river so that if one fell , it would fall into that .
5 It was done in fact by a brilliant military er tactic er and indeed the Americans succeeded in throwing the North Koreans back over the Yalob the river Yalob So up to that point limited force had been used to achieve a political objective , the objective was to s s to erm contain communism wherever communism looked like spilling over into other countries , non-communist countries .
6 By the early 1960s the largest metropolitan areas in Britain had moved into ‘ absolute decentralization ’ , whereby the principal settlements of each began to lose population , and by 1971 several of these areas were facing overall population decline , with residential decentralization taking place across their boundaries and spilling over into adjacent city-regions or further afield ( Hall et al. , 1973 ; Spence el al. , 1982 ) .
7 And best of all , inevitably , the celestial ‘ Car Wash Hair ’ is included here , where the band successfully sound like an entire orchestra swapping instruments mid-song , just about keeping their cool and gliding off into deep melody space , against the odds , with real elegant chaos .
8 A belated attempt at abdomen-straining brought it swimming back into fuzzy focus , but that dial was all I saw during the remainder of an interminable fast-jet loop .
9 Those words stroked a node of madness within him which somehow detached him from his excruciation so that he flew above it fleetingly before sinking back into molten anguish .
10 Until try small shabby door on landing : which opens up on to flight of filthy stairs going up into cobwebbed , dust-laden attic smelling of undiscovered murders , with tiny dormer window , size of large paperback .
11 The octopus can even modify the texture of its skin at high speed , a smooth , plain surface suddenly furrowing up into complex folds and ridges and gaining a complex blotched patterning at the same time .
12 Only two years ago I myself wrote an essay which uses all three of these mechanisms directly about Rose of Lima : it diagnoses her ‘ problem ’ as a sado-masochistic relationship to God , it relates this causally to a religious culture which is viciously sexist and heterosexist , and it suggests that we deal with all this by growing up into spiritual maturity and putting such alarming eccentricities behind us .
13 Your friends , your parents , your school , your peers , they all try and stop you going out into left field .
14 Going back into prehistoric time even these volumes were far exceeded by the eruption of Toba , yet another volcano in the very active Indonesian region .
15 At the moment six children would be going back into middle school in September .
16 And well I , we even considered me and my sister even considered going back into driving instruction .
17 At each stage of their return to the sea , they became specialised to their particular habitat , some going back into freshwater rivers , others frequenting shallow coastal waters or the deep oceans .
18 Infants developing competence in their first language , experience it as a working high-speed whole , yet acquire native speaker competence without any formal instruction , apparently without effort , without any conscious formulation of rules , and without any splitting down into manageable ‘ areas ’ ( although the features of adult speech to children may provide some help ) .
19 The first phase of the talks had taken place in Madrid between Oct. 30 and Nov. 3 when the Israelis and the Arabs had met around one table before breaking up into bilateral negotiations [ see pp. 38594-95 ] .
20 What he meant was that there are numerous examples of repeating patterns , and embryos seem to like breaking up into repeated units .
21 Meanwhile 58.3 per cent of the sons of non-skilled manual workers stayed working class , with only 10.7 per cent moving up into managerial or professional jobs .
22 All the fins are clear except the dorsal fin which has black at the base moving up into light yellow with a dark black edging to the dorsal fin tipped with yellow .
23 Red deer , for instance , end the season by splitting up into male herds and female herds , each with dominant members .
24 The occult even stoops to necromancy , the claimed practice of calling back into temporary life a dead body for the purposes of extracting information out of its spirit .
25 When the big fish needs to eat other little fish , it signals it is switching back into normal hunting mode by jerking its jaw in a particular way .
26 The elegiac note sounded ominously , unanswerably , offering calm and collusion : as if aware of the risks , Charles struck suddenly out , moving out into dangerous white water , tipping over the edge into a new reach .
27 Getting back into MID was his first problem .
28 ‘ I can now concentrate on getting back into commercial brewing and doing what I know best — making fine , traditional Yorkshire ales , ’ says Theakston , who has set up his new business next door to T&R Theakston and expects to be making 12,500 barrels a year by 1995 .
29 For it has led Darwin to think of each species as spreading out into varying conditions , over a range , over time .
30 When less fluid lavas are involved , which do n't break up into droplets , large gobbets of the molten rock are flung up from the vent , spreading out into irregular plates which may break up in the air into smaller bits .
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