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

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1 Sir Gerard 's mind slipped eagerly back into the past .
2 Therefore the total water volume of your aquarium ( 100 litres ) should be turned over a maximum of once every hour , and the water should flow very gently back into the aquarium , avoiding strong currents and surface turbulence .
3 I cram the minute halfway back into the stack of papers in the Quaker Oats box to mark where it came from and pick up the box .
4 But he waited-until the carriage was out of sight and then took her in its wake , halfway back into the centre .
5 He got the top off and a cup poured before lowering himself gingerly back into the driving seat and passing it over to Catherine .
6 The large men were flooding largely back into the room .
7 On the other hand , if it integrates with the airline part of the holiday and begins to develop its own hotels and resort complexes this is a case of backward vertical integration , since in this case the holiday firm is pushing its liaisons further back into the supply network of the holiday .
8 He is one of those individuals who has put even more back into the sport than he has taken out of it .
9 The shortage of Pentiums is so bad that those that have them are said to be ‘ tea-bagging ’ them — moving their precious chips from system to system to prove to customers that their box works , then quickly back into the safe .
10 He moved quickly back into the bridge and picked up a phone .
11 Covered in dirt , Chris came quickly back into the car , showing no pride in his achievement , but giving Damon a glare of contempt .
12 The Circotherm system includes a unique , finely balanced , fan which cleverly draws any wasted heat directly back into the oven .
13 His words and voice spun her instantly back into the past .
14 Got home and got straight back into the harvest .
15 They say who they want to send it to , add a few notes , send it off and are dropped straight back into the spreadsheet . ’
16 While appreciating the need to continue good exporting conditions for this major Scottish commodity , one could argue that perhaps much of the tax revenue goes straight back into the system to treat those many people who suffer from alcohol misuse or abuse ( not just whisky , of course ) .
17 One has only to listen to the forthrightness of ‘ Surely , He hath borne our griefs ’ or the intricate virtuosic weaving of parts in ‘ And he shall purify ’ or ‘ All we like sheep ’ , to realise that this is a choir or rare quality and precision which should be dragged straight back into the recording studio to commit to posterity its undoubtedly sublime view of Handel 's great choral masterpieces , Solomon and Israel in Egypt , or the earlier but no less demanding Dixit Dominus .
18 Watched by England number two Lawrie McMenemy , Stuart did get on as a 64th minute substitute , but added : ‘ It seems everyone else gets straight back into the side after injury except me .
19 Straight back into the routine just after a coupla weeks .
20 And this is the great chamber , and this is where their tour ends I think if we just go back if we go straight back into the place we started , and so just finish it off , then I must I must finish off as well .
21 Bones obliged him in everything he asked , even shaking him tenderly back into the saddle when he flew up round his ears or slipped tailwards .
22 And three more points takes them right back into the battle for the promotion play-off .
23 Climb the steep rib , a long reach being a distinct advantage , until a traverse leads right back into the corner crack .
24 It 's something that runs through mining folklore and can be traced right back into the lore of medieval German miners .
25 He turned and walked slowly back into the station , heading for the payphones .
26 When she was gone , Caroline turned slowly back into the house , seething so much with frustrated anger that she was speechless .
27 He took her arm , put her deftly back into the car and drove round to where small cottages nestled among trees .
28 as if obeying some universal command , the diatoms move simultaneously back into the sand .
29 Macaulay found The Prelude ‘ to the last degree Jacobinical , indeed Socialist ’ : the linking of words that look far back into the past and equally far forward into the future shows that from the point of view of the Whig benches at any rate , Wordsworth 's politics were lamentably consistent .
30 Theropods usually had teeth in the front jaws , and sometimes they extended far back into the mouth .
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