Example sentences of "into [art] [noun pl] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He is like a frightened rabbit staring into the headlights of the Tory juggernaut — he does n't know what to do about it , so he claims it 's unstoppable .
2 Wesley made little progress with agricultural labourers because they were tied into the rigidities of the traditional social order , although he blamed it on the stolid stupidity of the peasantry , but in many mining and manufacturing villages Methodism throve .
3 Whittingham also gives an insight into the lives of the fighter pilots at this time- and to some of their off-duty pursuits .
4 Chaos intrudes into the lives of the characters in Grand Canyon .
5 Through the ideological prism of Marxist historicism some Soviet Russian historians see ample justification for the Russians , intrusion into the lives of the Siberian natives in the benefits of civilization which the latter are deemed to have received .
6 Ironically this ‘ ethic of care ’ has a way of intruding into the lives of the most passionate ‘ ethic of rights ’ adherents .
7 No matter , because we 're asking you to project yourself into the very heart of the Swinging Sixties myth — into the lives of the
8 Now a brief diversion into the lives of the saints …
9 We were also glad to see 82-year-old Wally ‘ Left Hand Down ’ Perkins who has selflessly devoted the past 33 years to the unpaid unofficial work of guiding people reversing into the bays in a car park in Ipswich .
10 G passes through condensers. er and that er and then through the er through the coolers and it its got back into the boilers at the proper temperature .
11 erm but , but certainly the , the er er the period has given the Communist Party er quite a large number of trained cadres which will be able to go out into the villages in a way that they had n't been able to in because it would , that was all too soon .
12 Workshops housing up to a dozen frames had been introduced into the villages by the beginning of the reign of Queen Victoria , but the craft remained essentially a cottage industry for most of the nineteenth century .
13 She sat immobile for a long time , staring into the embers of the dying fire , her thoughts so chaotic that she could hardly make any order out of them .
14 They knew that palladium soaks up deuterium ( a form of hydrogen found in heavy water ) like a sponge soaks up water , an electrical current from a battery forcing the deuterium atoms out from a solution of heavy water and into the spaces between the palladium atoms .
15 Though only a mile from the centre of Bath , it has retained a cohesive feeling , clustered deep into the hills between the wooded slopes of Claverton Down and Combe Down .
16 On Thursday 31 April 700 Lisbon soldiers disembarked at Caniçal and , aided by fog , took the town of Machico and forced the rebels into the hills to the west .
17 They had soon left the Circle behind and were climbing steadily into the hills to the north , their horses ' hoofs turning stones underneath the snow , straining on the steeper parts .
18 The car left the autostrada and the bright new factories dotted about the valley and took a narrow , winding road up into the hills on the right .
19 For Paracelsus it implied a departure into the hills with a stout pair of boots to explore , decode , and harness the magic power .
20 We go for a walk up into the hills in the afternoon ; me puffing and panting and coughing after Andy as he strides quickly , easily up the rutted forest tracks .
21 The few human tribes that opposed him , mostly ancient enemies of the Unberogens , were defeated in battle or driven beyond the Grey Mountains to the south and northwards into the forests beyond the Middle Mountains .
22 The royal demesne vills , fields and woods in Sherwood Forest , for example , which had been put out of the forest by the perambulation of 1300 , were now ‘ entirely put back into the forests by the said King Edward ’ .
23 The Christians soon acquired a reputation even among the pagans for being generous with their money ; they thought it better to give than to enquire too closely into the merits of the recipients , and were therefore occasionally easy game for confidence tricksters .
24 The court does not , of its own volition , enquire into the merits of the case .
25 While the court will avoid going into the merits of the case at the interlocutory stage , the applicant for an order must establish materiality on the balance of probabilities .
26 Without research into the merits of the claims , it is impossible to say with authority whether most claims terminated in this way had no hope of success or whether applicants are forced to withdraw by the fear of costs .
27 Some felt relief at no longer having to ‘ fit the job ’ , a situation more often found amongst staff who stepped into the shoes of a departing college lecturer .
28 As regular , well-known members of the church it is difficult to put ourselves into the shoes of the first-time visitor .
29 The role of his papers , he told me , was to shake people in key positions out of their ‘ colonialist attitudes ’ : too many of those in responsible positions had ‘ jumped into the shoes of the departing expatriate and taken over his whole approach to the job ‘ .
30 He founded himself on the principle that an alteration of the terms of the lease agreed between the landlord and the assignee binds the original lessee because the assignee has been put into the shoes of the original lessee and can do all such things as the original lessee could have done .
  Next page