Example sentences of "[to-vb] [adv prt] into [art] " in BNC.
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1 | But , nevertheless , for me eternity was not now , and I had to go on into the future and in this world . |
2 | This includes considerable inspection work , firstly to establish what grinding needs to be done , and then to ensure that the body is fit , after they have completed their welding and grinding , to go on into the paint shop . |
3 | Such arguments over values , political or religious , were to go on into the next decade . |
4 | From year to year they used the same handrails to go down into the past : lifting the cartwheel at the crossroads , the drilling sessions by the river , the first ambush , marching at night between the safe houses , the different characters in the houses , the food , the girls … |
5 | Agnes stood directly in front of her mother now as she said , ‘ Would it do you any harm either to go down into the shop or to go over to the house and change the linen ? |
6 | That I may be able to go down into the Saxon crypt of a cathedral , a tiny , exquisitely rude little chapel , where a thousand years ago my forefathers knelt in prayer , is a draught of pure oxygen . |
7 | Nevertheless : If a teacher has , himself , to go down into the library with the whole class , or if you can only afford a third of a teacher to be in the library at certain times , then you are quite simply restricting the amount of work that can go on . |
8 | The tape measure had now to go down into the hollow as well as across the circle , and it was not long enough to do this . |
9 | My husband was mad on golf , and he used to go down into the park and send golf balls onto the lawn and then walk back through the rose garden which I put in the wrong place . |
10 | And was the water there to go down into the villages ? |
11 | Most of them would not go on , but three were brave enough to go down into the valley . |
12 | It was a gladness to slip down into the sheets knowing the day had ended . |
13 | As the rain continued to pelt down into the Sunday , Fijian confidence hit hew highs as they went in search of a record third successive title . |
14 | A programme to clear the ground of weeds and leave the soil fit to rake down into a seed bed is simple to devise . |
15 | Around the lid a number of small holes can be drilled for the water to pass through into the jar . |
16 | He waited for them to pass through into the central chamber . |
17 | A distraction may cause it to wander off into the road , with fatal consequences . |
18 | The not inconsiderable amount of time clients spend in hospital and campus services without supervision in part reflects the option for clients to wander off into the dormitories unnoticed . |
19 | He looked amazing , like Tarzan out of an old film , about to leap up into the tree-creeper . |
20 | She had n't wanted to come up into the cab . |
21 | To experience an exhilarating feeling of flight , imagine you are about to soar up into the clouds as your arms are thrust forward and backward in rhythmic motion . |
22 | and then I was trying to come out and I started to pull out into a gap and Brian said oh know , do n't pull out I said oh okay , he said the thing is your fairly tight so your gon na have to come out slowly so you need a bigger gap than otherwise . |
23 | But costly turnovers allowed Washington to creep back into the game , despite the dominance of the Cowboys defence . |
24 | how had Patrick managed to creep back into the house ? |
25 | The maid would have to be dismissed of course … the girl had brazenly admitted allowing Patrick back into the house , and Katherine was n't sure which annoyed her more — the fact that the boy had managed to creep back into the house or the fact that he had been alone in the girl 's bedroom . |
26 | In the intervening decades , there was ‘ a general trend toward spectator civility ’ ( Talamini , 1987:66 ) , only for aspects of disorder to creep back into the sport by the 1970s . |
27 | He opened the connecting door to the garage and stepped quickly into the darkness , feeling his way around the car and to the sliding door , which he moved open a few inches , allowing himself to slip out into the night . |
28 | And I did n't want to jump out into the fast-moving darkness without any boots and within range of fifty tommy-guns . |
29 | And the easiest way to escape is just to slip back into the cockpit of a racing car . |
30 | ‘ Let's go and find the bastards , ’ Sharpe grunted , and once he had said it he marvelled at how easy it was to slip back into the old ways of speaking about the enemy . |