Example sentences of "[vb mod] [verb] [verb] into the " in BNC.

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1 She must 've sneaked into the pantry one day when nobody was looking and taken a bite out of that jelly .
2 They were keen that their ideas should become incorporated into the ACRU/Guy 's Hospital proposal and that Ipswich should be one of the locations in which the project was carried out .
3 Agents must try to burrow into the minds of central bankers to discover what motivates their actions governing the course of the money stock .
4 ‘ One nurse should have gone into the security system first .
5 I mean , ‘ Cripes , dear , if it was anonymity you 'd wanted you should have gone into the family tailoring business , ’ I hear you say , with some justification .
6 So the other police should have gone into the other should have gone away somewhere .
7 Endara 's wife , Ana Mae Díaz de Endara , 25 , whose growing influence over government appointments and policy was widely resented , was declared persona non grata in the region after publicly stating following the Colón riots that the police should have fired into the groups of demonstrators .
8 ‘ But somehow , they became rooted in the reserves , whereas we felt they should have zoomed into the premier league and joined the elite of beat . ’
9 You should have nipped into the Gulf of Corinth — you might have stood a chance there . ’
10 The view of the American Museum of Natural History , led by the late Don Rosen , is that the dipnois should have evolved into the first tetrapods , or four-legged land-based animals .
11 The main force should have got into the town under the cover of a raid by the RAF , but by the time they were at the foot of the escarpment , this was almost over .
12 There is no good intellectual reason why the study of the British constitution should have slipped into the static sterility of the constitutional approach .
13 Despite Alcuin 's reservations about Eardwulf , the king must have stepped into the shoes of the slain Aethelred as a recipient of Carolingian favours and may even have married a kinswoman of Charlemagne .
14 It must have fallen into the trap some time ago .
15 Much thought must have gone into the adornment of this little building .
16 The hon. Member for Bournemouth , West ( Mr. Atkinson ) must have stumbled into the debate without having been nobbled by his Whips , because he gave a reasonable , rational and consensus-seeking speech , unlike the hon. Member for Barrow and Furness ( Mr. Franks ) , who gave the House his next election address for 37 minutes , but then proceeded to disappear , as though he is the only hon. Member with a constituency outside central London .
17 Apart from those who died in conflict many of the Britons must have fled into the Weald , or further west , but the idea of a mass exodus is probably rather overstretched .
18 Like all else , the crumbling fabric must have mouldered into the ground of time , wiped from the face of the earth , turned from the quick to dust .
19 It must have got into the churchyard from the meadow . ’
20 If you would forgive me yet again , I must go to change into the appropriate costume . ’
21 ‘ You really must learn to get into the swing of things , Lizzy . ’
22 ‘ … and some time today I 'll have to go into the village .
23 You 'll have to go into the branch , but what , if I was your manager , I 'd say well what we 'll do , is keep on working and training , until it 's alright
24 ‘ But I reckon they 'll have to get into the Premier League before they get the chance .
25 ‘ He 'll have to come into the house and sober up before he 's fit to take the cart home .
26 ‘ I wondered if she might have come into the office on the Saturday ? ’
27 ‘ In fact , from what Perkins was just telling his inspector on the telephone , anybody might have slipped into the Cookery Tent before the judging and put a poisoned cherry into temptation 's way for Henry Phipps . ’
28 From under the hunched shoulders and clutching arms a broken voice emerged in a stammering howl a stray dog might have launched into the night after company in its loneliness .
29 the French might have advanced into the country south of Charleroi , but the Duke , as ever , brooded over the left-hand side of the map which showed the great sweep of flat country between Mons and Tournai. that was where he feared a French advance that would cut the British off from the North Sea .
30 ‘ I do — but it does n't keep me from hoping that some morning you 'll come bouncing into the kitchen with a smile on your face — ’
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