Example sentences of "he [adv] [vb past] into " in BNC.

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1 He presumably bought into it with his Foreign Office gratuity .
2 He was one of 4 youths who attacked jogger , Paul Lanighan because he accidently bumped into them in the street .
3 The thirty five year old man was set on by four youths after he accidently bumped into them .
4 He took it , and after turning restlessly for some time , he eventually fell into a deep , heavy sleep .
5 He provided Gordon with excellent feedback from the track and by now he rarely got into trouble on the circuit .
6 He rarely came into the office , spending most of his time with his old friends waxing lyrical about his splendid son-in-law to be .
7 He merely flew into the airport , where the military rescue operation was being organized .
8 But when we emigrated to Mexico as teenagers with our mother and stepfather in the mid-fifties , he suddenly burst into articulate Spanish and English — to which he later added French and Indonesian — all of which he used to protect and further his folle indépendance .
9 He suddenly exploded into anger , jaw thrust out pugnaciously , dark eyes gleaming .
10 From being a painfully shy , diffident recluse , he suddenly metamorphosed into a garrulous and sometimes painfully overbearing extrovert .
11 He suddenly swam into vocal range again .
12 She tried to tell him that hospitals had been using such beds for years , but he just went into another tantrum .
13 He just stared into the dreadful dark depths of the old female 's shelter waiting hopelessly for some sign that she was alive .
14 He just stared into space , his face tight with emotion .
15 He just walked into her room , closed the door and came across to her , and Maggie stared at him wildly as he took her arm , drew her from the balcony and shut the french window ,
16 For a second he just looked into her eyes and then she was tightly in his arms .
17 We all lived on top of each other and at any time one of us was probably irritated in some way by one of the others , but Tom seemed to hold on to it for a long time , never expressing his resentment until he just flipped into despising somebody .
18 Marcus said nothing , he just climbed into the back seat .
19 And he just dived into the bloody office .
20 When he finally stepped into the group and asked to join there were murmurs from the trainees at the blue sash he wore .
21 After going to the ticket office and being refused a refund , he finally got into the ground at 3.35pm .
22 Like all good scientists , he knew that one should not rush experiments , so a great deal of Italian red wine and a good few Sambucas were consumed before he finally tottered into a taxi and gave the driver ( with some difficulty ) his address .
23 But he finally slipped into Sydney and left having signed a lucrative new deal to assist Australian rugby 's new television broadcaster , Channel Ten , with their marketing of rugby for the next three years .
24 He finally stumbled into camp four , nine hours later than expected .
25 When he finally turned into Brunel Road and stopped to catch his breath the others were nowhere to be seen .
26 In the slow movement , he generally retired into his own thoughts , poetically outlining the melodic shapes with a lyrical softness , but then , suddenly , landing lumpily on a note , as if the reverie had reminded him of a reality .
27 He soon came into conflict with Thomas Henry Huxley ( 182595 ) — known as ‘ Darwin 's bulldog ’ — over the question of humankind 's relationship to the great apes .
28 He soon ran into two costly double bogeys .
29 It did more for Denby Dale than for George III as he soon went into a decline , but the tradition then started is still going strong , with the pies getting bigger in size every time .
30 But he soon got into his stride , and began to develop a whole bestiary of characters who were to delight millions for the next twenty-three years .
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