Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] [adv prt] into a " in BNC.

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1 Then I branched out into a new area .
2 I came out into a strange city — hardly knew my way around .
3 I realized I was lost when the sky suddenly lightened and I came out into a broad clearing .
4 Eventually I threw up into a litter bin attached to a crowded bus shelter on St George 's Road .
5 After a time I settled down into a routine of work , sleep and having a good time — and not necessarily in that order .
6 I struggled up into a sitting position , my back resting against a chair .
7 I looked up into a bloated quivering face with three days ' growth of beard .
8 So I went up into a tree and I stayed there all night .
9 I dipped down into a valley , crossed into another field — moving faster and faster — and then climbed up towards a thicket .
10 ‘ I have a mic on my Vox AC30 and a direct which goes out into a Hi-Watt head , and that goes into a speaker simulator , which goes to the desk out front . ’
11 It publishes a monthly newsletter and a monthly Investors ' Handbook which builds up into a comprehensive reference manual covering all aspects of share investment .
12 NI takes a different subject every month , making its a valuable part-work which builds up into a library on development , a handy source of reference .
13 Jarvis managed to bowl only at half pace in the match against Hampshire at Basingstoke which petered out into a draw yesterday and he is still being troubled by a sore hamstring .
14 ‘ Good day to thee , sire , ’ Blind Hugh began , and found himself looking up into a face with four eyes in it .
15 At the end of a long esplanade , which opens out Into a concourse , there are two churches , one above the other .
16 This starts along a walled lane which opens out into a field .
17 Throughout the nineteenth century the national movements which developed within the great multinational empires which dominated eastern and central Europe were inspired by the sense of deep historical roots which went back into an imaginary golden age before the Ottomans , the Habsburgs , the Romanovs and the Hohenzollerns enslaved the ancient nations of medieval Europe .
18 The skull seems to become translucent , and within it — and in the flesh about it — knotted cords of white begin to form into a spiral which funnels back into a single thicker cord at the back of the skull .
19 Application 64 141 describes a miniature motor cycle which folds down into a briefcase .
20 She sank down into a chair and watched as Craig knelt before the fire , building it back into a glowing warmth .
21 When the carriage was out of sight , she sank down into a chair and put her hands over her face .
22 Would she grow up into a street urchin , plimsolls , no socks , grimy tee shirt , with a London accent grating on a nicely-brought-up ear ?
23 He tried to do it now , but she dodged back into a corner .
24 Maybe it 's like driving an expensive sports car : you ease through city traffic , choking on fumes and endless queueing , and then you finally edge out onto a motorway , you drop down into a stronger gear , and you press the accelerator .
25 Karelius was about to correct her when she blundered on into a question that left him speechless .
26 This frightened me but seemed to make me a hero in the eyes of the Dutch who broke out into a fever of winks and jerked-up thumbs and V-signs all round me .
27 She curled up into a small ball , too tired to stay awake , but too scared to go to sleep in case she started to dream again .
28 For one speechless moment she stared up into a pair of devil-dark eyes , then abruptly came to her senses and tried to break away .
29 In fact he probably stands a round of beers with his mates every now and then on the strength of his unrequited schoolboy romance with a fluffy little classmate who grew up into a sexy , albeit pintsized superstar .
30 Good good good remember that when you go back into a how many people actually do work with other people where they work where they work ?
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