Example sentences of "[noun sg] [adv prt] into [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Before returning , a look down into the tremendous ravine of Ling Gill below the bridge will reveal a most impressive scene , the beck hurrying along a bouldery bed fringed by trees and cliffs on its way to join the Ribble ; several minor caves have been found and explored along its banks but the rough terrain is a deterrent to walkers who prefer to travel sedately . |
2 | He drove about in a horse and cart and one of his tricks was to whip the horse up into a canter and crouch down behind the seat so people would think it had bolted . |
3 | The divide in English studies seems to be between those who want to bring the rift out into the open , and those who prefer to pretend that it does n't exist . |
4 | ‘ Elspeth ’ took her unbroken horse out into an open space . |
5 | ‘ Where are we going now ? ’ she asked as he swung the car back into the main street . |
6 | They both clambered aboard and the man pulled the boat out into the main current . |
7 | I think there 's always a fear to come forward and bring the details of a crime out into the open |
8 | She threads the Monster back into the high chair where it stiffens , collapses forward , stiffens again , slides down to the crutch-stop and lies there half under the tray , flailing its arms and legs like a crab on its back … and howling — howling like the hell-sent creature it is . |
9 | Compression of this sort , practised more widely , might succeed in bringing the play over into a new medium . |
10 | This is a standard way to implement word processing : the ‘ pool ’ breaks secretarial work down into a few routine activities like typing , making travel reservations and answering the phone . |
11 | Close inspection reveals that mean smoothing creates relatively large residuals in months adjacent to the strikingly atypical months , where perhaps common sense would suggest otherwise ; if the percentage in February 1985 represents some kind of error , for example , then the less resistant mean has spread this error over into the adjacent months . |
12 | I do n't really believe it will ever be made ; I am just providing the raw material which Letterman and some highly paid specialist screenwriter are going to work up into a proper script . |
13 | Its immediate result was to divide the aeroplane up into a large number of badly ventilated and inaccessible compartments . |
14 | Once , he chased a young girl up into the Milky Way . |
15 | Perhaps , though , his greatest achievement , was in leading tennis back into the Olympic Games for the first time since 1924 . |
16 | you 're actually pushing the head of the femur back into the joint |
17 | ‘ Agony , ’ he grated , depositing a dripping ice cube back into a cold drink and handing it to her . |
18 | He lifted Leonora into the passenger-seat then leapt up to back the vehicle out into the narrow street , waving his thanks as a weather-beaten old man slammed the garage door shut with a wide smile before waving them on their way . |
19 | Push tool down into the second stitch — the first stitch will slip behind the latch and you can ‘ crochet ’ the second stitch through the first . |
20 | Beyond this palace , turn to your right down into the Italian quarter by following the stairs of St John 's Hill ( Jánský vršek ) to the bottom . |
21 | But in 1956 Arkell changed his mind and ( partly , one suspects , for the sake of tidiness ) pushed the Callovian down into the Middle Jurassic . |
22 | Geographical proximity meant that these relations have continued to be of crucial importance through into the post-1945 period . |
23 | Many scorned it but rapturous press reviews helped push the record up into the high altitudes of the independent chart . |
24 | A squirrel scurried in fright up into a nearby beech-tree . |
25 | And , as importantly , ‘ Young Americans ’ ( 1975 ) reintroduced black music , with all its connotations of forbidden pleasure , in the form of disco back into the mainstream white audience . |
26 | The volatile Scot , currently on a month 's loan to Birmingham City after being transfer-listed by Southampton , lines up against Newcastle with an eye on a move back into the Premier League . |
27 | We have done exactly what I wanted us to do — brought a great singer back into the difficult world of the performer . |
28 | The objects in Braque 's painting like the Still Life with Fruit Dish ( Moderna Museet , Stockholm ) , which is roughly contemporary with the Compotier , are more faceted , and the whole surface is broken up in terms of the same angular but subtly modulated planes which carry the eye back into a limited depth and then forward again on to the picture plane in a series of gentle declivities and projections . |
29 | She had urged her husband out into the large society in and about Liverpool but the forays had not been happy . |
30 | But once I got out of the splitting shop out into the dry , handling leather rather than skins , er it were terrific , absolutely terrific . |