Example sentences of "[verb] [prep] [verb] into the " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | You got ta get into the rocking mood and you |
2 | Public outcry followed the revelation that Ben Silcock , who was mauled after climbing into the lions ' compound at London Zoo , was severely mentally ill and was not getting adequate treatment . |
3 | The publications of Degenhart and Annegrit Schmitt have succeeded in bringing into the mainstream of art history the study of artist 's pattern books and travel notebooks , which were so important for the dissemination of ideas and motifs , as well as book illustration and marginalia drawings . |
4 | It had become obvious early on to paleontologists that the dinosaurs , living in a moist and warm environment , in a sparsely populated animal kingdom , had succeeded in evolving into the first vegetation-eaters with no competitors . |
5 | Weary unto death , listless and depressed , Morvael abdicated by walking into the sacred flame of Asuryan . |
6 | Cash is counted and prepared for paying into the bank ( see Chapter 5 ) . |
7 | So , at best , they will have to make do with tuning into the programme in stereo . |
8 | But what one now sees belongs chiefly to the centuries of this book , the great church to the tenth and eleventh centuries , the atrium before it — though in form and function preserving the great courtyard of an early Christian basilica , where clergy and laity met before processing into the church for solemn eucharist — is of the early twelfth . |
9 | Mr Howell said no legal opinion had been sought before entering into the transactions , although a council memo suggested that visits should be made to other local authorities . |
10 | The Gascon origins of both Clement V and John XXII made this much easier , and although the house of Foix-Béarn did not succeed in marrying into the papal clan , a strengthening of bonds with the Duèse family ( from Cahors ) can be detected in a number of casual , but significant , references . |
11 | The first thing I noticed on getting into the ground was that the Leeds fans were making most , no , all of the noise in the ground . |
12 | She felt intimidated by going into the foyer bar . |
13 | Much more impact can be made by delving into the remote corners of society in pursuit of the exotic . |
14 | On the outside , the finest thing about it is the Romanesque triple apse , best seen by stepping into the graveyard ( and turning your back on the unpleasant modern monuments ) . |
15 | And erm he goes , say I , say , we 've got a runner today , Peony , but erm the lad 's got ta go he 's got ta go into the weighing room , wa well he 's , get his form , fill it in the weight he 's got the jockey who rides him , that 's got ta be erm , forty five minutes before the race . |
16 | James Shelton aged 25 , and George Barnes , aged 23 , two Liverpool constables , with a taxi-cab driver named Charles Wareing , were accused of breaking into the Co-operative Stores in Wavertree Road and stealing a safe containing £146 . |
17 | He said a pollution control chamber , into which all water from the road flowed before discharging into the river Kennett , collected any spillages from vehicles involved in accidents . |
18 | I managed to escape by diving into the river . |
19 | Here it probably happened by sailing into the steep wave resulting in a sudden loss of speed . |
20 | But officials admit some livestock has simply disappear after coming into the country . |
21 | This chapter is therefore an invitation of sorts — an invitation to pause before plunging into the specific issues that follow and to consider some of the broader questions about the nature of education management . |
22 | She was heard to pause before going into the bathroom , the latch of which gave its distinctive click . |
23 | Few spots in a country that is bent on careening into the future so effortlessly preserve the past in clapboard churches , colonial custom houses and a sailing tradition that stretches back 350 years . |
24 | However , it is interesting because of its paradoxical nature ; the apparent lack of behavioural responsiveness actually conceals very much heightened psychological and physiological sensitivity , with which the sufferer copes by withdrawing into the inactivity of catatonic stupor . |
25 | ‘ Some people just can not bear to come in second , ’ he said loudly enough to be heard before getting into the car , reversing it round and driving away . |
26 | He was wounded eight times altogether , and on the last occasion he succeeded in getting into the air before the scars were properly healed . |
27 | ‘ We 've been stopped from coming into the Park because of people throwing paper and things on to the ground . ’ |
28 | But still he held off arresting Gandhi , though other leaders were quietly put away , and thousands of Indians were arrested after wading into the sea to collect water for salt . |
29 | Now her parents and boyfriend , waiting in the hospital , sadly remember how , after the 1991 assault , Lesley talked of going into the Community Service section . |
30 | I decided against looking into the tumbledown wooden hut that had once housed the coal hopper controls . |