Example sentences of "[pers pn] [adv] [vb base] into a " in BNC.

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1 I only change into a fighter in the last ten minutes before I get into the ring . ’
2 I always go into a massive depression in November .
3 I look good in this , your standard little black number , and I still get into a tight pair of jeans …
4 Or 'ave you just come into a bit of money ? ’
5 You sometimes walk into a ward and talk to a new Greek patient , and they burst into tears because they have heard their own language , ’ says Maria .
6 I feel you almost get into a system of brownie points sometimes .
7 Well I think there 's a difficulty with that on , you then get into a difficulty on housing provision for Greater York districts .
8 We always launch into a thou erm a full page erm sell .
9 We then move into a short period of dramatic play ( or " busy time " as it is sometimes called ) in which each of the groups go about their business , which they greatly enjoy — until frustrations begin to creep in .
10 One might suppose that since they now come into a court with an equitable jurisdiction , the equitable doctrine must be applied .
11 But they do not examine the institutional reasons for low black attainment , or study ‘ race ’ as a social category , and so they often fall into a biologically founded account of absolute ‘ race ’ differences .
12 Well as I 've s as I 've said earlier , erm what we 're basically saying is that because these erm sites do not perform a greenbelt function and er they then fall into a white land situation , that that white land is a is an area of land that becomes er at the end of the plan period in two thousand and six , er they are areas which could be considered development .
13 They actually enter into a lease or tennis agreement with the London Borough
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