Example sentences of "into [noun sg] [pron] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The man could both paint and name a chair , and bring into play his own terrors and hopes , and behind it , the culture of Europe , north and south , the Church itself .
2 Nevertheless , they will continue to play a vitally important role in post-16 provision , a role which may well increase if , for example , West Glamorgan puts into practice its stated intention of creating tertiary colleges .
3 In the course of defending Creole against Shane 's objections , Chris actually begins to use Creole , distancing his own talk from that of Shane and putting into practice his own belief that " if you want them to know your culture you have to chat it " .
4 His experience had led him to become a teacher at training sessions , but that prevented him from putting into practice his own form of calculated waging of war .
5 In 1845 Webster took into partnership his assistant Miles Thompson , who had been with the firm since the 1820s , and shortly after that he virtually retired from active business .
6 Many in the Labour movement were prepared to admit that without a strong combination forcing the National Government out of office " we may not get a chance for a very long time of putting into effect our ultimate aims " .
7 One of Churchill 's reactions to the fall of France was to put into effect his long-brewed plan to vent his anger and frustration on his secret services .
8 Dominant social attitudes towards retirement place the personal needs of older people in a subservient position to the perceived social and economic interests of the wider society , and it is this that causes many older people problems , bringing into question their personal value and worth , and placing them under considerable social stress .
9 They had been Promotionaries , on their respective sides of the Wars ( which were not , of course , between Good and Evil at all , as non-combatants of every species always assumed , but between Banality and Interest ) , with great things expected of them once their training and indoctrination was completed ; but they had each done something silly , something which called into question their very suitability for exalted rank , and now they were here , in the castle , with a problem to solve and games to play , being given one last chance ; a long shot , an unlikely appeal procedure .
10 The Presbyterians drifted into Unitarianism whose rational approach attracted the ministers and the merchants but had little appeal to the poor ; there was no ‘ enthusiasm ’ about it .
11 You must also take into consideration your own comfort .
12 Amnesty called on the government to translate into reality its constitutional obligations to protect human rights .
13 One is at the end of Gaudier-Brzeska ( 1916 ) ; another is in a Criterion article of 1937 , ‘ D'Artagnan Twenty Years After ’ ; in that year appeared Polite Essays , which includes Pound 's review of Binyon 's translation of the Inferno ( originally in The Criterion for April 1934 ) ; there are two tributes to Binyon in Guide to Kulchur ( 1938 ) ; in 1948 at St Elizabeth 's Pound was still pressing Binyon on the attention of Charles Olson ; and as late as 1958 he took the opportunity of Pavannes and Divagations to get back into print his appreciative note on The Flight of the Dragon .
14 This is achieved by carefully examining its structure and design , which usually change to some degree with time , and taking into account its general condition and appearance .
15 Apparently , Randy wanted this guitar to be known as the Concorde' and when you take into account its overall shape and sleek appearance it does have a great deal in common with its British Airways equivalent .
16 The War Wagon itself can sustain 5 wounds as shown on its profile ; this is 2 wounds more than a chariot to take into account its heavier construction .
17 It was possible , for instance , to investigate the details of the moon 's orbit , taking into account its finite size , the spin of the earth , the wobble of the earth upon its axis , and so on .
18 The court must make its own value judgment on the defendant 's conduct , taking into account its social utility and the care with which it is carried out .
19 Here , then , not only is there no contradiction between the former analysis and the more complete view of the infinitive taking into account its generalized person , but the latter actually gives a fuller understanding of the posteriorizing movement of to by specifying its starting point and its end-point : the positions occupied by the two representations of person involved .
20 The rules described for chariots apply to the Pump Wagon as well with a few exceptions which take into account its unusual construction and crew .
21 Ultimately , the judge found in favour of the plaintiffs , who had argued that the educational authorities were illegally discriminating against their children by failing to take into account their distinctive language and culture .
22 A useful guide to the first two is to see what effect a symptom has on the patient 's ability to function as a whole , creative , happy , loving human being , taking into account their normal state of course !
23 At Level Two students will plan and organise elements of residential experience , taking into account their personal abilities , preferences and goals when selecting tasks .
24 At Level Two students will plan and organise enterprise activity , taking into account their personal abilities , preferences and the goals which they have set for themselves .
25 Regarding the commercial banks , it suggested reducing debt through the exchange of principal for long-term bonds , payable over 35 years or more , taking into account their reduced value on the secondary market ( 27 cents to the dollar at the end of 1989 ) .
26 However , in a judgement with frightening implications , the magistrate rejected pleas to consider the materials in context or to take into account their intended purpose as artistic source material .
27 ( 2 ) That , although there was power under rule 22 of the Rules of 1991 to order the local authority to pay costs , orders for costs in cases involving children were unusual ; that the justices ' findings and reasons , even taking into account their extended reasons , were insufficient to sustain their order for costs ; that the local authority 's exercise of its statutory role in the changing circumstances affecting the children could not be criticised ; and that , accordingly , the award of costs should be set aside ( post , pp. 527H , 528H , 530D–E , 531B–D ) .
28 Evaluate the Sales Director 's proposals taking into account their expected impact on profits and on the break even point .
29 Meanwhile , Desmond Hunter subjects to detailed examination the gracing symbols found in the principal source of Byrd 's earlier keyboard music , My Ladye Nevells Booke , completed in 1591 ; he takes into account their physical placement on the stave , and the associated harmony and written-in fingerings .
30 If we are required to make a decision which has consequences for other people , and if we wish to treat them properly , then it is vital that we take into account their own views on the matter .
  Next page