Example sentences of "[Wh det] [vb past] [pers pn] into [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 THE wayward Marquess of Blandford last night claimed it was a lost love which led him into drug addiction .
2 Back to the beginning , and the archery shafts which led us into carbon tubes and the generation of so many new designs for steerable aerobatic kites .
3 Finally a solution was found — large numbers of animals were rapidly disposed of by sending them whole or shredded to a plant which turned them into fertiliser .
4 Pound was a bohemian figure , despite his Quaker origins , who espoused an anti-credit economic philosophy which thrust him into anti-Semitism .
5 Rose Hilaire had a waking dream , one which followed her into sleep and came out again the other side to stay with her all day , going with her into Belmodes side by side like a fellow worker .
6 With Maurice Thompson and Samuel Moyer [ qq.v. ] he was involved in trading ventures with West Africa , which brought him into competition with the East India Company , but he went on to become the company 's deputy governor in 1657 and its governor in 1659 .
7 He took two steps which brought him into contact with me : he joined the ATC Squadron , and he saw to it that he did Fire-Watch duty on my nights .
8 In 1533 , the Bishop became involved with the Holy Maid of Kent , with her visions and threats against King Henry VIII , and also along with his friend Sir Thomas More with the Bishops ' stand against the King over his divorce and subsequent marriage to Anne Boleyn , which brought him into trouble with the King .
9 Membership of the Begonia Society came soon after , which brought me into contact with some wonderful growers and really marvellous people who would help in giving growing tips and providing cuttings of varieties I did n't have .
10 She joined Inghinidhe na hÉireann , a feminist society founded by Maud Gonne [ q.v. ] , and wrote for its journal , Bean na hÉireann , which brought her into contact with the Irish suffragettes .
11 She also did voluntary work in a girls ' club , which brought her into contact with the local women 's trade union council , the Women 's Co-operative Guild , and ultimately the Labour party .
12 It was only the circumstances of the minority which brought them into conflict , and even then the rivalry should probably not be seen as inevitable .
13 It was only the circumstances of the minority which brought them into conflict , and even then the rivalry should probably not be seen as inevitable .
14 What evidence is there that these overt policies and covert assumptions have outlived the political and economic structures which brought them into being ?
15 The offences which brought them into prison tend to be extremely cold-blooded .
16 This may be analogous to the question why a newly independent State is deemed bound by a treaty which brought it into existence .
17 The classic statement of this view by T. H. Marshall ( 1950 ; reprinted in Marshall and Bottomore , 1992 ) conceived citizenship as a condition in which all members of a society possessed clearly defined and steadily expanding civil , political and social rights ; and in this sense it embodied a principle of equality which brought it into conflict with the inequalities engendered by a capitalist economy or existing in various authoritarian regimes .
18 But Taylor will have noted that there is much more to Atkinson 's game now than the blistering pace which launched him into league football with Ipswich Town six years ago .
19 He would just do it if it was right and that , in the end , was what got him into trouble . ’
20 I think that 's what got me into crime .
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