Example sentences of "[vb pp] [pers pn] [adv] into the " in BNC.
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1 | Oxford United are facing their own big challenge … four defeats in a row has dropped them back into the bottom half of the table … last home win was this one against Millwall … tomorrow they should … they must dish out the same treatment to struggling Southend |
2 | Had carried him off into the mountains , in this harsh summer of storms and floods ? |
3 | The current had already sucked us out into the centre of the river , and we were gathering speed downstream . |
4 | No matter what Joe 's and Tamar 's earlier lives had been , both were respectably married now and their father had accepted them back into the fold . |
5 | Got me back into the swing of things . |
6 | She was not like the Glasgow woman , who had shown him out into the street . |
7 | They had tidied him away into the cupboard where nobody would see him . |
8 | ‘ What a disgusting thing to do , ’ she said aloud , as she walked through the silent house , picking up two items of Nick 's clothing from where he had flung them almost into the utility room . |
9 | No snap of the fingers was going to break this spell , her complacency and her inertia had locked her deep into the circle of assumptions . |
10 | Its crassness repelled her but it slid inside her because she recognized it as her name and suddenly there was a dark pit , a chasm , a void , and the gravity of being dragged her down into the dark heart of weight . |
11 | Money has driven them deeper into the planet , money has brought them down in the world … |
12 | I guessed why she had brought me round into the shadow . |
13 | The accidents that had brought me back into the past were real enough . |
14 | His Canadian passport was beautifully forged and had brought him effortlessly into the Republic of Ireland and thence on the ferry to England . |
15 | The route we had taken through the cordillera from Cajamarca had brought us virtually into the outskirts of Tmjillo and we had put up at a hotel in the centre of the city , all three of us more or less out on our feet . |
16 | The protector had taken the Great Seal , returned by the queen-dowager that very morning , and given it again into the chancellor 's care . |
17 | And he had taken them down into the Southern Ocean , not as far as we were going , but far enough to be in amongst the ice , circumnavigating the whole land mass of Antarctica in waters no man had ever sailed before . |
18 | He ca n't have told Sister , or she 'd never have pitched you straight into the A.R.R. Unit . |
19 | She had taken him out into the garden to show him various easy spring tasks that must be done , and for which she would pay him , and he had refused . |
20 | Possibly her father had earlier taken her up into the workings to show her where he was working ; even so it would have been an apprehensive little girl who made her way along that long tunnel . |
21 | What I 'm saying is that he would n't have taken her out into the woods . |