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

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1 Hotels , shopping centres and offices increasingly seem set on going into competition with Kew Gardens .
2 We are all familiar with the use of computerised mailing lists by advertisers ; they , too , are now international and going into orbit via satellite transmission — in the remorseless pursuit of markets and lower unit costs .
3 ‘ He 'd started going into Medewich on Thursday evenings after the Youth Club here .
4 Perhaps this is why , in addition to officers attending meetings , Labour Councillors need to improve their self indulgence by going into Europe on junkets .
5 ‘ We worried about her but Elizabeth wrote back that she was more worried about us back here going into London with IRA bombs going off . ’
6 ‘ Not enough funds are going into research on brain tumours in both adults and children . ’
7 If you 're going into business with Kev , I 'd slap Sukey into a chastity belt pronto . ’
8 Nine years later , in 1651 , Charles II watched the final defeat of the Royalist forces at the Battle of Worcester before going into exile after Cromwell 's victory .
9 A corrody was board and lodging which normally such houses sold to applicants ; the precise terms varied , often specifying the accommodation as well of servants and horses , and going into details of food and firewood .
10 Patients who 're worried about going into hospital for surgery , are being invited to a new clinic to help ease their fears .
11 He returned to England in the latter half of June and hardly had time to catch up with outstanding work before going into hospital in July to undergo the postponed operation upon his hernia .
12 So 15 of the chosen 30 have a very modest international background — and this going into tests against Australia , the World Cup holders , and South Africa , who rather fancy that they would have won it had they been invited .
13 Going into town for entertainment usually meant a dance or the cinema — in Banbury .
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