Example sentences of "[noun] [adv] [adv prt] into the " in BNC.

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1 From there the road was downhill , so we were able to coast noiselessly down into the sleeping suburbs , then dismount and push the bike into the city centre .
2 He turned his head away , pressed forehead and eyes hard down into the covers of Fanny Hill .
3 The coroner laughed and was still bellowing with mirth as Athelstan urged his horse forward out into the street .
4 In doing this they have first cheapened the original process of selection which is made meaningless , and then , they shoved their heads firmly back into the sand .
5 He threw the keys casually up into the air and caught them .
6 When last read , the new regulations now being hatched quite rightly make the process of requalifying just as unattractive and that will drop the entire issue firmly back into the lap of player recruitment within this country , with all that entails .
7 The fact that the South East contains a disproportionately high number of professional and managerial inhabitants , that transportation is generally quicker and easier because of the flatter terrain , and that industry and population from London have been relocated to surrounding satellite towns have all conspired to spread the ex-urban population far out into the metropolitan hinterland .
8 There are several of those ancient fortified lake dwellings , which we call crannogs , most of them to be found in the northern half of the island , some of them in lochs well up into the hills .
9 Trent saw a dark figure grab the jib foot , forcing the sail hard back into the breeze .
10 They they sent a fountain of er water right up into the air .
11 I cram the minute halfway back into the stack of papers in the Quaker Oats box to mark where it came from and pick up the box .
12 Shrugging , he slipped Blake 's identification into his pocket , and tossed the wallet carelessly back into the bushes beside the corpse .
13 As you improve and start to sail in stronger winds you will want to sweep the daggerboard completely up into the board at high speeds to help with control .
14 We never did persuade them , but for six valuable hours we managed to hold them on that course far out into the Flores Sea , until finally they came to their senses , noticed the distant and almost invisible shore , and hurriedly tacked towards it again .
15 I remember her telling me — much later in life — of that standing on a distant hillside and seeing the ochre dust float slowly up into the azure sky .
16 They range from the Himalayas right up into the Altai mountains of Mongolia .
17 The shore slopes steeply down into the sea and , if the ocean were to dry up , the island would emerge in a single block some 5,400m above the sea bed .
18 He poured what was left of the hot water from the kettle into it , then pressed the cork firmly down into the opening with the palm of his hand .
19 He surfaced from his dive well out into the cove .
20 The partner then pushes the leg further up into the air .
21 There 's a hole straight down into the sea .
22 By the time the shipmaster had practically blasted the sail off them with his cursing , the tide was carrying the lymphad sideways up into the mouth of the Sound .
23 Fold any excess cable neatly back into the mounting box ; tighten the holding screws , then fill in the cable channel with cellulose filler .
24 Leninism 's cult of a quasi-military party also placed a premium on discipline and extended Moscow 's control over national parties into a rigid straitjacket on doctrine right through into the 1950s .
25 Walker is keen to continue the momentum which has thrown Norwich right back into the thick of the title race and he is reported to be keen to sign Bournemouth 's highly rated striker Efan Ekoku .
26 Then she edged the van gingerly out into the unfamiliar rush-hour traffic .
27 The Circotherm system includes a unique , finely balanced , fan which cleverly draws any wasted heat directly back into the oven .
28 On the other hand , if it integrates with the airline part of the holiday and begins to develop its own hotels and resort complexes this is a case of backward vertical integration , since in this case the holiday firm is pushing its liaisons further back into the supply network of the holiday .
29 With an oath the Weasel hurled the time-teller far out into the heather , where it possibly hit a stone .
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