Example sentences of "[vb -s] [adv prt] into the [noun pl] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | He looks down into the gardens hidden everywhere behind the patched and crumbling walls . |
2 | and all that , then he took no notice of that , now do n't tip them silly , what the bloody hell you doing that for ? , do n't be so daft , so any way , then Stuart goes off into the showers and turns the showers on |
3 | The story-line and the characters may seem incredible — like beautiful Remedios who floats up into the heavens while folding the household sheets and is never seen again — but Marquez defies you to disbelieve in them . |
4 | We walked along a path which wound attractively through a pine forest and round a spur of the hillside to a viewpoint overlooking the lower lake , which is spanned by a narrow bridge across which a minor road leads up into the mountains . |
5 | The rationing of the household in the labour market spills over into the goods market by constraining the household 's demand for goods . |
6 | The pondering , the getting at the absent Stavrogin , proves successful ; many acute observations buttress the central ‘ lukewarm ’ truth about him , and analysis spills over into the notebooks where Tikhon 's God's-voice function appears at its clearest . |
7 | The play tails off into the cries and inarticulate exclamations where , escaping the situation in which ‘ I got ta use words ’ in their normal sense , language becomes a cry of despair and horror as primal as the ‘ Wah ! |
8 | It surges up into the grounds of the fabled castle , into the cold and weary magic of Schloss Hartheim . |
9 | He comes pounding down the ladder , and grabs the wheel and stampedes back into the waves . |
10 | But this may be the grandest folly yet : a totally unsympathetic character ( a man as hard to empathize with as Mick Hucknall , whose ‘ Money Too Tight to Mention ’ graces the second commercial ) in unbelievable situations , doing ridiculous things with no discernible connection to beer at all ( unless , of course , he 's drunk when he tears up the plans , gets fired , breaks back into the offices and holds the board at gunpoint while he sells their cars ) . |
11 | For every year at midwinter the sun grows weak and pale , and he sinks down into the marshes to spend the long winter night there , and Mokosh , the old witch , his foster-mother , nurses him until he is strong again , with herbs and spells and incantations . |
12 | The peaty brown moor land rises up into the hills and makes for rough walking . |
13 | The lower side of the film is softened and , as the solvent evaporates , the film settles down into the irregularities of the etched face and produces the replica . |
14 | Floodwater leaves sand on the planks and this sweeps up into the banks with cornices through which it is possible to step inadvertently . |
15 | Occasional evidence of this percolates through into the newspapers and , now and again , the law reports . |
16 | He felt like one of those astronomers who pumped radio waves out into the galaxies in the hope of finding intelligent life elsewhere in the universe but never heard anything back . |
17 | Without forests and ground cover , the rain simply runs off into the rivers . |