Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [vb infin] into [noun] " in BNC.

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1 He had begun to feel that Carrie was really growing to love him , and having borne him his first child the future had seemed so promising , but now today he had been reminded that everything he had hoped and prayed for could so easily crumble into dust .
2 The general intention in each case was not to screen the train completely , but to ensure that trains did not suddenly come into view without warning , for that would have given no time for a rider or driver to control the horse , which might otherwise bold or unseat its rider .
3 This is a poll which does not necessarily take into account diligence , ability to pass on knowledge and devotion , as the one with the highest number of votes wins .
4 In my view the trial judge , dealing as he was with a most difficult and distressing case under the necessity to give a decision immediately , did not sufficiently take into account the degree of pressure required to constitute undue influence in the case of a patient in the position of Miss T. I agree with Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R. that there is abundant evidence which would justify this court in coming to the conclusion that she was subjected to the undue influence of her mother which vitiated her decision .
5 Also , it does not easily take into consideration key interests in housing such as absentee landlords letting as a business .
6 To bring our participants ' social world to life in the kind of detail that is likely to carry conviction we must not just plunge into descriptions of the world of school and football ground , since without the concepts to see it no alternative to the official picture is likely to emerge .
7 Their wings do not normally come into contact , but even so there are problems when the dragonfly executes sharp turns .
8 Admittedly , these are all important areas of concern , but moral reasoning should not be made subservient to what are themselves value laden economic arguments which do not always take into account the totality of the costs they purport to assess .
9 All who have given thought to the matter agree that an apparatus as complex as the human eye could not possibly come into existence through single-step selection .
10 Even if the latter is true , it does not automatically translate into increases in higher level educational streams ; in some countries the main growth at the 16–19 stage has been not in the pre-academic general streams , but in the intermediate ‘ technical ’ ones ( Squires 1989a ) .
11 However , such psychological analyses , concentrating upon the individual 's feelings , do not typically take into account the wider , ideological context .
12 Just as a particle and an antiparticle will totally annihilate each other if placed in contact , there is no reason why pairs of particles and antiparticles can not abruptly spring into existence — the accent being on the word ‘ pairs ’ .
13 STABILITY : - The molecules have an extremely stable structure and do not readily decompose into hydrogen and oxygen .
14 Comparisons between the incomes of age-groups , as in Figure 5.1 , give only very rough indications of differences in disposable financial resources , for they do not fully take into account differences in household composition .
15 This projection , based on modest assumptions of growth in demand , does not fully take into account reductions in working hours or demands resulting from technological advances .
16 This is particularly significant for Marx since it means that the communal principle does not fully come into conflict with the interests of individual constitutive families as it did in the ancient city , a contradiction which ultimately led to further developments .
17 Interests in the North Side , then , do not neatly fit into neighbourhood units which dovetail into the geographic space of the area .
18 We we we 're empowered er by these orders to set up the new constituencies , er they do not actually come into effect to enable the elections to be held upon them er until all the countries of the E E C have agreed the changes that are necessary to accommodate the new numbers that er they will be having , er so the act , the ninety three act , has a commencement hour within it .
19 Unlike more organised writers he might perhaps more easily fall into contradiction , but it seems more likely , or at least more satisfactory , to suppose that Coleridge was fashioned greatly by his environment when writing .
20 And you 'd also better take into account the fact that I want to get on with some work while I 'm here .
21 Later on , Nigel automated the system , so that when the water level fell low enough , the compressor would straight away go into action .
22 Some sources believe that Diana may even eventually move into St James 's Palace .
23 ‘ What 's so funny ? ’ he asked , hoping that her mood did n't suddenly break into hysteria .
24 If voters say they want politicians to care , how do you show it — you ca n't suddenly burst into tears .
25 But I mean if you 're puking up everywhere you ca n't obviously go into work can you ?
26 ‘ You ca n't possibly drive into Palma with a leg like that , ’ Fernando insisted .
27 It does n't automatically boot into Windows then ?
28 cos really , we did n't really go into cost relations
29 I ca n't really go into details I 'm afraid , but , yes , it 's for the final push . ’
30 The image did n't really spring into life , rather vague , figure behind glass , partly Julia , partly the girl he 'd met on holiday .
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