Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] [vb pp] into the " in BNC.

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1 There have to be , there are particular reasons why er after revolutionary upheavals you very often get authoritarian forms of government and I would say in Russia and i i in a sense it 's linked with Harold 's question as well about erm the Chinese following a Stalinist model of economic reconstruction think what you 've actually got in Russia is not this sort of mass hankering after authoritarianism but you 've got a situation where the bureaucracy that controls a completely devastated , backward economy , which is what they 've actually got in the early nineteen twenties , where the working class democracy has just disappeared really with , with the , with the economic collapse , with the factories shutting down , with all of the old communist party militants going into the Red Army or getting sucked into the state bureaucracy with that sort of complete collapse really , economically and socially and politically , you 've got a situation where the central priority of the leadership is to build up Russian industry as quickly as possible so that Russia has got the armed forces it needs
2 It is extremely important that you press more pieces from the bouquet than you think you will need , as some of the plant material may turn brown in the press or emerge pressed into the wrong shape .
3 These would be examples 1 and 4 , where the party who carried the plaintiff 's goods had also issued the bill of lading or had entered into the freight contract with the shipper , whether or not the shipper was the plaintiff .
4 Something that became woven into the legend and the myth of the day , ’ said Dierdriu .
5 The material that has fallen into the more massive of the two galaxies rekindles the quasar at its core .
6 Karajan 's devout acceptance of what there is proved to be the Fifth Symphony 's best bet , given the untold care and effort that has gone into the shaping of the minutest detail of phrasing and , indeed , colouristic effect .
7 I must say I 'm most impressed with the thought that has gone into the design .
8 The care and attention that has gone into the creation of this addition to the scenery makes the ‘ single-tailed ’ B–25 ( see page 18 ) all the more puzzling .
9 This brief contribution simply highlights the lack of research that has gone into the social , cultural and linguistic needs of the adult minorities .
10 As a former Minister with responsibility for the disabled , I am well aware of the immense amount of work and care that has gone into the care of the disabled .
11 All that tender loving care that has gone into the brickwork , the glasswork and much of the decoration has made the Pally sparkle again .
12 Well , I , I , I think it depends on the skill and the industry that has gone into the enterprise , but in itself it could be extremely interesting .
13 CHURCHMEN and intellectuals in East Germany , worried about the new , aggressive tone that has crept into the emotional issue of reunification , yesterday warned against confrontation and called for a temporary end to mass street demonstrations .
14 Right : A tropical chiggoe flea that has burrowed into the sole of a foot , gorged itself , laid eggs and been squeezed out , having grown from less than one millimetre wide to more than a centimetre .
15 Go and do it in the corner , ’ said one Glasgow mother to her child , in a story that has passed into the folklore of the Second World War .
16 I have read carefully the reasons given for the record levels of inward investment that has come into the United Kingdom , including Wales .
17 She had scarcely seen the Mercedes that had swung into the drive just as she 'd been about to go out , but by sheer instinct she had swerved to miss it , sparing only a glance in the mirror to tell her the other car was safe before speeding on her way again .
18 As well as giving him moral ascendancy over the rest of the company , driving himself to exhaustion might also cloud critical judgement , so that comments would be made on the effort that had gone into the show rather than on its quality . )
19 Oh , the patient looked a mess , but Kath had seen the enormous care that had gone into the alignment of each suture , the meticulous attention not only to the innumerable tiny little muscle fibres , nerves and blood vessels but to laughter lines and wrinkles to ensure that the tissues were realigned as closely as possible to their original position .
20 This had the advantage that ‘ lower ’ races could be dismissed as earlier steps in the advance that had survived into the present in parts of the world where there had been less stimulus for mental development .
21 Taff was chatting to the 3 mortar team that had moved into the orchard that afternoon .
22 We were thieves that had stolen into the fold
23 Richie stooped to pluck a wild oat that had strayed into the wood .
24 ‘ They made me feel like … some species that had got into the wrong time slot .
25 And for , our children when they grow up cos I had three children nearly every one that had come into the town had little ones so you see we were trying to build a town for our children to benefit which I do n't know whether you think that it 's a town worth living in but I think that we have done very well and it 's a town that is caring for such as the elderly they really do care !
26 The United States had the same sort of missiles in Italy and in Turkey and , before this crisis had developed , President Kennedy had in fact ordered them er to be er er returned to the United States , these missiles had no strategic purpose at all because a major change that had come into the strategic equation was the arrival of the intercontinental ballistic missile , and it was these missiles , really , which held the strategic balance er and were to change in fact radically both international politics and global strategy over the years to come , but I 'm going to talk about that later , the point I 'm making here is that er Khrushchev claimed that the missiles were there in the event of an American assault on Cuba , they were a deterrent weapon in exactly the same way as the defensive deterrent weapons er were d were defensive er for er the United States and for the Soviet Union .
27 The United States had the same sort of missiles in Italy and in Turkey and , before this crisis had developed , President Kennedy had in fact ordered them er to be er er returned to the United States , these missiles had no strategic purpose at all because a major change that had come into the strategic equation was the arrival of the intercontinental ballistic missile , and it was these missiles , really , which held the strategic balance er and were to change in fact radically both international politics and global strategy over the years to come , but I 'm going to talk about that later , the point I 'm making here is that er Khrushchev claimed that the missiles were there in the event of an American assault on Cuba , they were a deterrent weapon in exactly the same way as the defensive deterrent weapons er were d were defensive er for er the United States and for the Soviet Union .
28 In many parts of Britain tips add identity and character to the landscape , Isolde reclines and glistens in the virgin whiteness of the Cornish sunlight , contrasting with the coal-black tips that have heaved into the dull , greyness of Lancashire 's sky .
29 One harbours superior thoughts as to just where and in what circumstances her hosts can have possibly imagined her wearing such things , until one recalls that only seconds before one was counting the endless number of stoats ' tails that have gone into the making of the coronation robe .
30 It traces the ingredients that have gone into the melting pot to become Sicilian cuisine , right back to the ancient Greeks , Arabs and Normans .
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