Example sentences of "[adv] [to-vb] [adv] into [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Most of them would not go on , but three were brave enough to go down into the valley .
2 Perhaps Jeremy Bates , who with his partner , Neil Broad , were ranked sufficiently highly to go straight into the main draw for the doubles , might have considered the position of his partner a little more sympathetically .
3 When it was fully clear of the cave , three of the hunters then simultaneously seized it by head , tail and centre and held it straight enough to feed head-first into an open sack held by the fourth man .
4 We were a finely balanced investment , threatening constantly to topple over into the realms of demand and expenditure .
5 Steelworker hero Jeremy , 25 , said : ‘ I could n't believe he was daft enough to run straight into a castle .
6 An hour , and an hour perhaps to get back into the town — still plenty of time , as she had judged it , to catch the ten-forty-five for Bleasham .
7 It would be ironic to pick away at the mortar for a few decades only to break through into the next-door cell .
8 Ceolred evidently felt secure enough to attack deep into the territory of King Ine in 716 , fighting against him in battle at Woden 's Barrow ( Adam 's Grave ) overlooking the Vale of Pewsey ( ASC A , s.a. 716 ) .
9 Just to go out into the night can give a sense of this ; night is not empty darkness — the night can be warm , or stormy , still or windy , and the darkness is charged by this and has a changing life of its own .
10 It might seem too easy to him just to slip away into the fantasy world of death . ’
11 And the easiest way to escape is just to slip back into the cockpit of a racing car .
12 I immediately took this to be a delusion — a sign that I was shortly to withdraw forever into a blissful lunatic world of favourite food fantasies .
13 The Bank concludes that , despite the remarkable fall in the headline rate last month , the underlying level of inflation is still close to the top end of the target range of 1 per cent to 4 per cent , though at this stage of the cycle it should be below 2 per cent , and the cost pressures created by devaluation have still to feed fully into the economy .
14 Cardiff shoved Frye aside to peer out into the darkness .
15 The tape measure had now to go down into the hollow as well as across the circle , and it was not long enough to do this .
16 There is not space here to delve deeper into the reasons for the unusual profile of the Indian prison population as described above .
17 Some of the local Red Cross employees had taken refuge in the office , unable even to step out into the street .
18 It is difficult for us today to enter fully into the power that those ancient rituals must have generated , but anyone who has attended a religious revival meeting with its emphasis on repentance , tears and rebirth is in touch with the same forces .
19 And was the water there to go down into the villages ?
20 The male patient is asked to pass a little urine ( perhaps the equivalent of two tablespoons ) into one glass beaker and then to pass more into a second beaker .
21 Banbridge tried hard to get back into the game but Dungannon stuck again in the 75th minute when Denver beat Hanley with a neat lob to complete his hat-trick .
22 ‘ I really have n't had a chance to press my claims and I sincerely believe I am pushing uphill to get back into the side for a long time . ’
23 The ice crystals are pure water , and the concentrated brine that remains after their formation gathers in pockets and channels between the crystals , ultimately to drain back into the sea and sink away from the ice-sheet .
24 Agnes stood directly in front of her mother now as she said , ‘ Would it do you any harm either to go down into the shop or to go over to the house and change the linen ?
25 In windy weather every effort should be made to avoid having to move the glider upwind ; it is far safer and easier to land well into the field and then to move the glider back down wind .
26 When they landed Paul crept forward to peer out into the grassland from behind a tree .
27 The only thing Lisa wanted to do was flee , but she summoned the strength from somewhere to step back into the office , pinning a brave smile to her face .
28 But I felt strongly that , like Dickens again , though not to the same extent , he needed occasionally to get out into the open : which is why he made his way down to Cornwall once or twice to see Ronald Duncan .
  Next page