Example sentences of "into the [adj] [noun] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | A name strip with the room number allocated is also typed for insertion into the alphabetical guest list , which is usually located on a rotary stand in telephone exchange area . |
2 | As Beth went through the house , from the wide spacious hallway and into the dark-panelled sitting room , it struck her again how lovely the old place could be . |
3 | turn the mixture into the pre-cooked pastry case and pour the topping over it . |
4 | She was liable to propel into the governmental system men associated with business success , of whom Lord Young became the prototype from 1984 onwards She was truly a distinctive phenomenon , linked neither with the patrician values of the grandees in the shires , nor with the manufacturing Tories of northern England cherished by Disraelian Tory Democracy in the last century , nor again with the suburban Toryism dominant in the party in the interwar years and after 1951 . |
5 | As a result of these worries , there was incorporated into the 1986 Education Act a specific prohibition against promoting ‘ partisan political views in the teaching of any subject in the school . ’ |
6 | Nils shoved her hard and she fell into the deep satin embrace of a sofa . |
7 | She crossed to one of the racks which lined the watered silk walls , her feet sinking into the deep cream carpet , and took out a black gown , holding it against her . |
8 | However , in 1969 , a large-scale American project , JOIDES ( Joint Oceanographic Institutions Deep Earth Sampling ) was able to confirm it , in the course of a programme of drilling into the deep ocean floors to sample the rocks and sediments there . |
9 | As she settled down into the squashy leather upholstery of the nest-like sofa she listened with half an ear to the voices on the tape , each caller seemingly convinced that disaster would intervene if Luke did n't call them back immediately . |
10 | It works on the same principle as a concrete mixer , with baffles moulded into the black plastic drum , where they produce a tumbling , corkscrew mixing action when the drum is rolled . |
11 | Not bothering to put the designs back into the black plastic cylinder , Paul stuffed them under his arm . |
12 | She had to have something to hold on to when she disappeared into the black hospital pit . |
13 | All of these accoutrements are dispensed in a once-in-a-lifetime , never-to-be-repeated , Chrysalis carrier bag to the 94 Brits and 60-odd continental journalists who finally file into the International Press Centre at 2 pm Brussels time — primed , not-so-primed , willing , able and ready to pit the wits of the two South London jokers with attitude . |
14 | The failure to conclude the Uruguay Round had injected uncertainty into the international trade system , causing trade disputes to resurface , and had led to the " impression that there is one law for the most powerful members of GATT and quite another for all the rest " . |
15 | His anxiety for equal terms in the nuclear club was echoed a few months later by , of all people , Aneurin Bevan , who urged his fellow left-wingers at the Labour Party conference not to vote for Britain to give up nuclear arms with the famous plea : ‘ Do not send the British Foreign Minister naked into the international conference chamber ! ’ |
16 | It was nearly forty years later that I met the man who had carried me into the only half track we had left and who reassured me . |
17 | But we 've still got plenty to work on and we wo n't get into the real tour rhythm until next Saturday . ’ |
18 | Joszef had put capital into the real estate business of a distant cousin . |
19 | The unfortunate victim was wheeled directly into the major treatment area , where he was examined by the duty medical officer . |
20 | Another of his plans is to have ‘ task forces ’ to coordinate research into the major killer diseases , so that teams do not overlap each other and duplicate work . |
21 | We 've had it into the major research laboratories around the world who specialise in security . |
22 | But it was very premature , and I 'm very I was very sorry that they 'd taken this step , but very , very pleased when I saw the result coming out , and I 'm do congratulate them on their common sense there that they were prepared to put the opting out aside and were looking seriously and sensibly into the tertiary college consultations . |
23 | Tigrett , who sold the Hard Rock chain and set up the charitable Rama Foundation , falls readily into the cranky crackpot mould : he is even married to Maureen , former wife of Ringo Starr who has been supporting his friend George Harrison 's Natural Law Party . |
24 | She had walked fast , comfortable in the old corset she had firmly told Lyddy was quite sufficient for visiting the Rectory children , and as she passed the church , the clock struck three sonorously into the still afternoon air . |
25 | It seemed to be from a small freshly lit fire and it went unwaveringly into the still April air until it dissolved in the far blue . |
26 | He forced his way into the Junior Bok side last season and on form is an irresistible play-maker . |
27 | The thin line of squares — alternately black and white , like tiny isolated tiles of shadow and mist — stretched over the table , through the air on either side of it , and disappeared into the distant side walls of the broad games room , over fallen slates and past rusting columns of wrought iron . |
28 | In particular , they should consider how they will encourage diversification into the non-residential care sector . |
29 | Sales executive Pim Meaning said there no plans to move gallium capability into the digital computer market . |
30 | The answer is that after mating they produce a tiny mobile larvae totally different to the adult this might drift for miles on ocean current before settling into the fixed adult form Down Norwick power station in North Wales , generates the electricity by pump storage , in off peak hours thousands of gallons of water are pumped from a lower lake to an upper lake , when the demand for electricity is high bowels are opened and water falls back through turbine to the lower lake again , this generates the power To ensure that the lower lake would never flood the was diverted through mile long tunnel in the mountain side , no one knew for certain how the salmon , the trout and even rarer that used to migrate up the old river would cope with the tunnels , pitch darkness and slow flowing water . |