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

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1 The fighting continued , spreading off the great curve of the ramparts down into the buildings below .
2 So it shoots the notes down into the body better , and the whole instrument resonates .
3 Or consider Hotel Bora Bora where guests stay in overwater bungalows with steps down into a lagoon , or the Moana Beach where you can watch the fish below your bungalow through a glass coffee table !
4 He followed the officer , stepping through the churned mud , towards the concrete steps down into the brigade post , and the presence of the Chairman of the Revolutionary Command Council .
5 MACAULEY Culkin 's Kevin may be a dab hand with a booby trap but when it comes down to straightforward , grimy-faced scallywaggery , there are a couple of Irish lads in Into The West who could give him a run for his money .
6 One evening off a week he had insisted on , and on those evenings Mr or Mrs Crumwallis occasionally poked their noses through into the boarding annexe and yelled ‘ Shut up ’ through the riot proceeding there .
7 I did knock at the door , then , when there was no response , took a couple of steps through into a passage floored with stone slabs and containing nothing but some buckets of coal and a rack of ancient clothes , gardening clobber by the look of it .
8 At the junction of the Pilgrims Road where one way leads to Birling and the other branches off into the woods there stands the remains of the old Free Chapel of St. Lawrence , which gives its name to the lane running by .
9 The Doctor sat on one of the medlab 's empty diagnostic beds , and drew his legs up into the lotus position .
10 Then he shot his legs up into the sky and slid down without a splash .
11 Then he ducked under the lintel and climbed the steps up into the kitchen , Beth following .
12 It is a quiet and comfortable village to stop in , as I know from having stopped there , with good walks up into the hills and good fishing — for trout , which begin to come into their own around here as the mountain fish .
13 My hon. Friend is right that the Labour party would be prepared to overrule parental ballots and to take grant-maintained schools back into the throes of LEA control , which is exactly what parents have voted to escape .
14 Large groups of whales occasionally swim ashore and lie stranded on the beach , unable to move their huge bulks back into the sea .
15 The Revenue Commissioners and senior officials of the Department of Finance also advised against the idea because of the difficulty in implementing the scheme and policing the flow of funds back into the country .
16 A customer could , therefore , ring round the booths seeking preliminary quotes , before going through the form of putting two traders out into the pit to effect the execution .
17 Try and explain it in terms of say let's get all these kids out into the school yard ,
18 Not so long ago , a haulage company would send its drivers out into the world with few opportunities to communicate with then until they returned .
19 The Vale Rescue Centre prides itself on releasing nine out of every ten animals back into the wild .
20 Melanie nervously clattered the animals back into the box .
21 ‘ To facilitate them we have asked a number of show societies to provide judges with an opportunity to bring a selection of prize-winning animals back into the ring and explain why they have been considered champions . ’
22 Children will enjoy seeing the chaos as Henry leads all the young animals out into the forest , where it takes the farmer a long time to catch them .
23 From this road it is possible to make small diversions down into the villages of Jardim do Mar and Paúl do Mar , although the roads in and out of them are more spectacular than the villages themselves .
24 Old Ian Strachan locked himself in the bedroom with old Caroline Pickthorn , and old Peter Staithes pissed out of the window and threw empty bottles down into the basement area .
25 His chief current problem is visible from the Deanery windows , rearing 404 feet up into the sky , and presently sheathed in 28 miles of specially designed scaffolding .
26 Cable cars and chair lifts carry you effortlessly 7,000 feet up into the mountains , where there are sun-soaked terraces , with entrancing panoramas of the mountains .
27 Suddenly it soared forty feet up into the air , singing as it accelerated , a clear , far-carrying song : ‘ Tseep , tseep , tseep . ’
28 Sometimes the youngsters flew a few feet up into the air to take the offering — to return immediately to the safety of the wire .
29 We 're preventing caravans entering because we want to er prevent and incursion by the gypsies back into the park again , having spent several weeks trying to get them out , and another week or two er clearing the place up after them .
30 Thakin Nu made yet another attempt to bring the White Flag Communists back into the AFPFL .
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