Example sentences of "can [verb] into [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Evidence from Sweden , one of Europe 's biggest paper manufacturing countries , states that the chlorine used in paper bleaching processes results in by-products known as dioxins , some of the most toxic substances known to mankind , which can migrate into food .
2 More importantly we urgently need a limit on the amnount of packaging chemicals that can migrate into food .
3 This move does away with the productive uncertainty which the concept of the unconscious can introduce into psychology .
4 Memory , the dynamic of past consciousness , can translate into resistance in order to shape a new time to come .
5 Merseyside Operations is striving to comply 100 per cent with its National Rivers Authority consent agreements — which detail what and how much C&P can discharge into water courses .
6 He can lapse into playground language at moments of stress , or even , at one point , some pompous Hancockian self-pity .
7 We can withdraw into fatigue .
8 ‘ You mean you can see into reception from there ? ’ said Vic .
9 Even the most popular personalities , as William Whitelaw was in 1981 , can run into difficulty .
10 Early in marriage a re-ordering of priorities is necessary , and some couples can run into trouble if their commitment to , or dependence upon , healthy robust parents can not be allowed to take second place to their commitment to their new partner .
11 In the next section , I proceed to summarize Kuhn 's account of how a paradigm can run into trouble and be replaced by a rival .
12 When both parties are actively seeking control and using similar tactics , the conversation can escalate into conflict or a competition .
13 ‘ As for saying that smacking can escalate into abuse , surely that 's true of emotional punishment too .
14 All the letters in the alphabet can fit into word shape boxes :
15 But other diseases directly linked to pollution have also been taking their toll , such as Leucopenia costadas which attacks white blood cells and can develop into anaemia or leukemia .
16 That is not a matter that I can take into consideration other than to say that I am satisfied that the proper figure for a multiplier for working life , er which I shall take in this case , is the multiplier of sixteen contended for by Mr .
17 Modern studies of this kind can take into account many fine-grained features of both the physical and the social environment .
18 Despite their differences , however , both initiatives are associated with an increasing interest in modular-based curriculum provision , and with forms of assessment which can take into account the wide range of outcomes they are designed to achieve .
19 They can take into account a painting 's decline in value if it has actually sold for that price , but because the decline in prices has only occurred at a dealers ' auction , they will not accept that a similar composition by the same artist would automatically be valued at much less than the price paid for it .
20 Whilst it is not possible to conceive of a designing system which can take into account influences which are beyond the designer 's knowledge and comprehension , it is possible to generate a fundamental design procedure in which all relationships , known to the designer , are " captured " and tested for .
21 a board can take into account not only the location , character and proposed use of the premises .
22 Provision should be made for ensuring that the competences specified can take into account changes which may occur in technology or market requirements .
23 Secondly , there are some express guidelines in the UCTA , but these are far from complete , are only indicative , and impose no restriction on the other matters which the court can take into account .
24 ( 10 ) Similarly , although the requirements of fairness under the Code and CA 1985 , s459 do not necessarily coincide , the Code is a helpful guide to the City 's views on fairness which the court can take into account when deciding whether a shareholder has been unfairly prejudiced for the purposes of s459 ( see Re a Company [ 1986 ] BCLC 382 ) .
25 There are lots and lots of other things the D S S can take into account .
26 This posture is ideal for facing a confrontation , because the arms are so loose that they can swing into action to block an attack and strike at the same time .
27 Returning to the perspective of ‘ adaptive behaviour ’ discussed earlier , we can call into question the extent to which going abroad can legitimately be viewed as a student strategy for maximizing opportunities in China when by necessity it implied turning away from the ‘ motherland ’ in favour of foreign countries .
28 The final decision on the text of the Treaty on Political Union and on Economic and Monetary Union will be taken by the Maastricht European Council [ in December 1991 ] so that the results of the two conferences can be submitted for ratification simultaneously during 1992 and the new treaty can enter into force on Jan. 1 , 1993 .
29 Out there , away from the Inspirals ' tour bubble , is a land of a thousand lakes and a million fir trees , where the people drive with the headlights on in full daylight , past ‘ Moose Crossing ’ warning signs , to restaurants where you can tuck into sautéed reindeer .
30 Information collected within operational systems , such as payroll , can feed into decision support systems such as are provided by a personnel data base , which in turn can be summarised for use in planning and modelling systems .
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