Example sentences of "[vb base] [vb pp] into a [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Some people take furniture to her that they do n't like or are tired of and want transformed into a work of art ; she optimistically feels that no piece of furniture is totally without hope .
2 Hardest hit are small businessmen and the unemployed who get sucked into a string of debt , partly as a result of easy credit , added Mr Milburn .
3 In behavioural terms this usually occurs when people participating in the meeting get locked into an information loop .
4 First they send you all round the town and then you get processed into a system with thousands of other people and it does n't feel at all like driving to a town on the coast and just getting on a boat .
5 Stroll around a spa ( and the atmosphere of relaxation hardly invites you to go any faster ) and you become lulled into a state in which you would hardly be surprised to see a monarch emerge from the portals of an hotel .
6 ‘ I did n't want to become a prisoner of my own fame or become pushed into a corner by success and just sit at home . ’
7 We can be locked into the ritual just as we become locked into a dance sequence once we have entered upon it .
8 There is a straight approx 150yds long then go left into a grade II with a distinct step on the right at the bottom in the main flow .
9 The last superintendent said we ca n't and I think the point you 've raised is very valid since they actually stopped that facility said that they 're not allowed in there it has I think gone into a situation where it is n't a very quite place erm and there problems about what goes on there etc and I think need to look at it .
10 This is where I get nervous because I know I 've come into a word I know I ca n't pronounce .
11 so we made each what was the dining room they 've made into a bedroom , but just do n't that he , cos you could see them doing it .
12 Here , they 've moved into a ventilation brick .
13 things that happened to them while they were making the African Queen and , they 've turned into a story .
14 Ye , well it 's not in the shop , I think it 's big country house they 've turned into a hotel or something .
15 I was quite tough with them and , though I 've only ever smacked them once — with the stick end of a feather duster which , since reading Mommie Dearest , they 've turned into a wire coat-hanger — I would often destroy them with tongue-lashings that still twist my conscience today .
16 I 've turned into a Dinner Lady overnight
17 I 'm ok during the week , I 've got into a routine of getting up and going to and all the rest of it , but weekends I have every other weekend off , it 's not quite a routine is it ? ,
18 Now you 've flowered into a beauty ,
19 ‘ The fact is , my dear boy , you 've entered into a liaison with a woman who is totally unsuitable on every count . ’
20 26 You 've entered into a bet that you 'll sleep alone in the forest tonight .
21 And we 've all been in situations where we 've walked into an area , whether it be , sort of a car park is poorly lit , or you 've gone down a lane that 's perhaps been overgrown by bushes and things like that we generally do n't feel as confident .
22 ‘ Well I 've run into a spot of bother .
23 ‘ You look as if you 've climbed into a bin-liner , Maisie . ’
24 ‘ There 's a piece of teak I 've carved into a hex sign up there , ’ he pointed out .
25 ‘ We 've strayed into a zone with a high magical index , ’ he said .
26 ‘ Think you 've strayed into a madhouse , I dare say . ’
27 First impressions , as you pass beyond the large tumbled blocks of Gendarme Ridge , is that you have stumbled into a quarry .
28 To an extent educationalists have fallen into a pit of their own making .
29 We have fallen into an ageist trap and attempted to generalise and to stereotype .
30 They have developed into an oligarchy , most interested in their own affairs …
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