Example sentences of "[noun] [verb] [to-vb] into the " in BNC.

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1 ‘ And when does Lisabeth want to move into the annexe ?
2 A child is duly conceived , but before ever it is born , there is a breakdown of relationships between Sarah and Hagar , and Hagar has to flee into the desert .
3 The authorities promised to look into the complaints in order to defuse the situation .
4 After joining , the Liberals and even the Labour supporters seem to drift into the Conservative way of thinking .
5 Anton , the old répétiteur , even older than Busacher , sat down at the piano and the thin embarrassed voices began to tingle into the air , picking up a little courage as they went on .
6 As kite rallies began to get into the full swing of a tightly packed annual diary of events from the early 1980s , so a new trend developed .
7 When the sound of high-flying aircraft began to soak into the atmosphere people stopped talking but looked more interested than afraid .
8 And she still remembered how , as the car began to climb into the lake land hills , she had seen her first mountain — a sharp blue crag that , outlined against the sky , had made her sit up and stare .
9 Nikos started to come into the room , stopped and withdrew unobserved .
10 Louis Dersingham managed to drive into the city without seeing a single house built after 1860 .
11 ‘ What is the difference between David Mellor and the England team ? — David managed to get into the Spanish box . ’
12 Part-way through entering the sale , Mr. S. had to go into the store-room to check a detail regarding the [ number of the ] machine that had been selected .
13 Authors had to economize in the number of illustrations they used , and readers had to get into the habit of turning a number of pages to find a relevant picture .
14 THE Football Association is to launch an inquiry into the crowd trouble involving Birmingham City supporters at Blackpool on Saturday , when police in riot gear had to move into the terraces to part fighting fans .
15 However , there are many exceptions to this rule because animals need to tune into the frequencies important for their survival .
16 Lt Ferris may have been caught-out by the P-51 's undesirable characteristic that in a tight turn , will a full fuselage tank , the aircraft tended to tighten into the turn and stall out before the pilot could regain control .
17 Given the fact that soil conservation as a government policy was a colonial phenomenon , it is perhaps not surprising that in post-colonial Africa at least , foreign aid tended to move into the vacuum left by the colonial administration .
18 Neil Anderson from Ireland wants to get into the few rooms that the bunch of keys and big iron key wo n't open .
19 Our greatest joy is that the twenty-one-year-old wants to go into the car industry . ’
20 A good example of dogged determination to try to force into the marketplace an extremely ingenious invention which had been rejected by the consumer , was our pursuit of merulite packings for soft drinks .
21 COMPANIES wanting to break into the vast Russian consumer market have been told to cater for five distinct groups with very different tastes : Kuptsi , Cossacks , Students , Businessmen and Russian Souls .
22 To the resident population of inner London must be added the one million commuters estimated to travel into the city each day as well as visitors and the increasing numbers of homeless people .
23 Whetton seemed to move into the All Black position more or less on the grounds of seniority and his experience of captaining Auckland .
24 Golf : Beck refuses to enter into the spirit
25 Wasps ' foray comes as the sport prepares to move into the next decade as a leading spectator attraction .
26 Competitiveness tends to creep into the work in ways which frequently blind the participants to the real issues being worked on .
27 One by one some of Europe 's more unfancied golfers began to eat into the U.S. lead , courtesy of some dreadful American blunders on the final hole which brought back memories of the match at Muirfield Village two years before .
28 Corbett nodded and they staggered on , bodies soaked in sweat , eyes blinded with panic , legs and feet threatening to turn into the heaviest lead .
29 CD satirized the University 's political and religious conservatism in The Examiner ( 3 June 1843 ) in a piece entitled ‘ Report of the Commissioners Appointed to Inquire into the Condition of the Persons Variously Engaged in the University of Oxford ’ ( MP ) .
30 CD had already satirized the Movement some years earlier in a piece for The Examiner ( 3 June 1843 ) , ‘ Report of the Commissioners appointed to inquire into the Condition of the Persons variously engaged in the University of Oxford ’ ( collected in MP ) .
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