Example sentences of "he [vb mod] [verb] into [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 If he takes into account matters which he ought not to take into account , or fails to take into account the matters which he ought to take into account , then his decision can be overridden by the courts .
2 The position of the minister , and the broad range of policy considerations that he must take into account , precludes this .
3 The Home Secretary is not bound to act on the advice of the inspectorate of constabulary , but he must take into account a large number of other factors .
4 However , since the early 1970s exchange rates have been floating instead of fixed ; this means that , if the investor ultimately intends to liquidate the investment and repatriate the proceeds , he must take into account not only the risk associated with investing in overseas securities markets , but also the exchange rate risk : the risk of adverse movements in the exchange rate .
5 A person is guilty of contributory negligence if he ought reasonably to have foreseen that , if he did not act as a reasonable , prudent man , he might be hurt himself ; and in his reckonings he must take into account the possibility of others being careless ( Denning LJ in Jones v Livox Quarries Ltd [ 1952 ] 2 QB 608 ) .
6 Doris will account for all that in the script and he 'll fall into line the second he sees hard print .
7 Except that on three separate programmes this weekend , Neil was urbane , witty , direct and honest — so much so that it is now rumoured he might go into TV presenting .
8 He had devoted Sunday evening to making a plan of action and knew exactly what he and everyone else he could press into service was going to be doing this morning .
9 Damian Flint , the man she admired so much , thought she was some cheap little floozy he could get into bed while taking Swift at the same time .
10 Alright , he could grow wheat , or he could grow , grow barley , possibly he could transfer into milk production , pig production , erm , so the prices of all those other commodities are going to be important .
11 And there were times now , even amidst the hubbub of men , when the numbness reared its head again and made him think that eventually it would take over and he 'd descend into silence , cold unthinking silence .
12 He would go into hysterics because be believed it .
13 Once a year , he would go into hospital for a month-long check-up .
14 He was a regular at fashionable Glasgow nightclubs like ‘ La Ronde ’ in Sauchiehall Street but when the mood took him , which was most nights ending with a ‘ Y ’ , he would wander into corner pubs and hold court .
15 When he was a director of Sotheby 's he would bicycle into work each day .
16 Why , for example , one of the , the points that Freud 's book makes , is er when Wilson was confronted with a conflict , particularly with a stronger male , like an elder brother , or his father , he would retreat into speech making , and apparently he used to have a barn where he did it , and he used to go and give speeches in the barn .
17 He wanted to keep close to the poor bloody infantry , so he would get into discussion with the constable on the beat , the detective on a case ; and he would end up being drawn into endorsing action that the Inspector in charge would not countenance .
18 As this might be my last opportunity to draw the attention of my hon. Friend the Minister to the topic of the proposed M12 between Chelmsford and the M25 , I seek his assurance that when he receives alternative proposals for that motorway 's line of route , he will take into account that such a motorway may not be required .
19 I see my right hon. Friend shaking his head , but I hope that he will take into account what I have said .
20 Er it it take a view on that er appeal he will take into account the er development plan forces which were in force at the time .
21 He can lapse into playground language at moments of stress , or even , at one point , some pompous Hancockian self-pity .
  Next page