Example sentences of "[noun pl] back into the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 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 .
2 Large groups of whales occasionally swim ashore and lie stranded on the beach , unable to move their huge bulks back into the sea .
3 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 .
4 The Vale Rescue Centre prides itself on releasing nine out of every ten animals back into the wild .
5 Melanie nervously clattered the animals back into the box .
6 ‘ 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 . ’
7 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 .
8 Thakin Nu made yet another attempt to bring the White Flag Communists back into the AFPFL .
9 We need to ‘ internalize the externalities ’ — to bring all the costs back into the box so that the consumer pays the full price .
10 Substituting these expressions for expectations back into the price equation we can write :
11 Marie took the stockings back into the living-room .
12 Privately , New York dealers say the Ikeda Gallery is loading works purchased by Japanese investors and dealers back into the U.S. market , part of a trend that has been observed for a year now .
13 He staggers back into the bathroom .
14 Sharply reduced reserves — often 50% of 1990 levels — have not lured buyers back into the market for second- and third-rate works .
15 ‘ Untidy pig , ’ Alice said , and began to throw things back into the drawer .
16 When the meal was over , they helped Lizzie to clear away , taking the picnic things back into the house , and then began sorting out Sara 's luggage .
17 The Robe had been shot in Cinemascope in order to tempt the new television viewers back into the cinemas .
18 The mother will continue to drag the young ferrets back into the nest but eventually she gives up as their demand for fresh meat increases .
19 I shoved my dreams back into the bag — no time to zip it up — and went after him .
20 Coming down from the Col de la Pierre-Saint-Martin there is no need to drive back the way you came , through Arette , because five miles from the top you can fork off to the right and come down in sylvan splendour through the very heart of the Forêt d'lssaux , before either turning sharp left down the valley of the Lourdios and a not very good road to Issor , or carrying straight on to follow one of two better , more or less interchangeable roads back into the valley of the Aspe near Bedous .
21 Those were the great days of the business in La-La Land , before we closed the state borders and tossed the immigrant filthos back into the desert . ’
22 And whether he knew it or not , he could be marked down as one of Wainwright and Hayling 's ‘ Fragments ’ — a talented 1960s person who had now matured and wanted to bring his skills back into the mainstream .
23 But when I pack my skis back into the hall cupboard behind the vacuum cleaner , I want my hills unsullied by pylons and snow fences .
24 You owe it to them and all decent people to put the record straight and slap the Nazis back into the gutter .
25 His concern was echoed in a BBC Panorama investigation Only Fools And Horses ? on Monday in which it was claimed that off-course bookies must pour more of their profits back into the Sport of Kings — or it could die .
26 But the constraints on their existence implied by operating from open waste land or shacks have created a situation where they have little security , and the owners of such enterprises are discouraged from reinvesting a high proportion of their profits back into the business .
27 ‘ Lille ’ , wrote a local observer in 1869 , ‘ is not a capitalist town , it is first and foremost a great industrial and commercial centre ’ where men put their profits back into the business , did not play about with them , and hoped they would never have to borrow .
28 We 're trying to get big , local companies to plough some of their profits back into the community through the work of the YMCA . ’
29 Cockburn himself was one of those whose reappraisal led to East Lothian becoming a notable region for agricultural reformers , ploughing their profits back into the improvement of the earth .
30 Er we 're getting a few bodies back into the team emptying the treatment room and and things are looking a lot better .
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