Example sentences of "carry [adv prt] into [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 With what to Erika , used to the erratic behaviour of the old Lada , was miraculous smoothness , the driver let in the gears and drove down Grotewohlstrasse but instead of turning left at Leipziger Strasse , carried on into a warren of tiny streets .
2 She said nothing directly in answer to this , but carried on into the house , saying , ‘ I 'll have to tell her she 's gone somewhere . ’
3 The risk of disease being carried down into the soil could be extremely serious .
4 This ensures that adhesive is carried down into the hole
5 This instrumentalism would be carried over into a principle of differential rewards according to the hierarchy of office , in which prestige , privilege and power would be isomorphic with one another .
6 The competitive spirit that had the branches trying to out-do each other 's fancy dress outfits carried over into a Karaoke competition .
7 The grammar of English is carried over into the signing and presumably evaluation of the adequacy of BSL is based on the ease with which it can be fitted to this English format .
8 The interest in the one form of expression can be carried over into the other .
9 It was part of the Greek conception of reason , after all , that reason was not just a purely intellectual affair but carried over into the life-world , with considerable practical implications .
10 During the 1970s and 1980s , therefore , Britain 's coalfields differed significantly in the degree of militancy of the NUM members , and those differences carried through into the conduct of the 1984–5 dispute .
11 The nutty edge is carried through into the flavour , where it meets pleasant hints of green apples and greengages .
12 But these efforts are of no eventual pedagogic value unless they can be carried through into the classroom context .
13 Straining away from him , gasping with tortured gratification , she found that it seemed the most natural thing in the world to her when she was swept up in his arms and carried through into the bedroom , to be laid gently down on the soft duvet .
14 This control is carried through into the dining room , a pleasantly airy space with 280 seats and a no-smoking section that has big windows looking towards Ilkley Moor .
15 A SIX-day-old baby escaped with just scratches after being plucked from her father 's arms by a tornado and carried off into the night .
16 He then said ‘ God bless ! ’ to her , and was carried off into the night .
17 Of our initial 20 rather withered carnations , 18 were carried off into the distance by bewildered or gracious lasses .
18 A New York police spokesman said : ‘ An investigation is being carried out into the disappearance of the money .
19 This chapter ends with a description of a study carried out into the origin , evolution , spellings and meaning of an individual surname .
20 Furthermore , different voice settings typically characterise different languages , and these settings may carry over into the pronunciation of a second language ( Laver 1991 : 248 ) .
21 Bukharin pointed out that many features that characterise Primitive accumulation carry on into the history of capitalism itself , yet they do not thereby mean that capitalism is forever stuck in that particular stage of development .
22 When I went in , I carried on into the kitchen without taking my coat off , put the kettle on and then went into the living room .
23 They carried on into the marquee , where eight ten-foot-long buffet tables decorated with pale pink and white angelicas held dozens of silver tureens , filled to capacity with imported smoked salmon , lobster , and finely sliced fillet of beef in aspic .
24 The first is a transcript taken from some ethnographic research which I carried out into the culture of racism amongst young white men living on a large council estate in South London .
25 The car carries on into the night .
26 And this observation carries over into the theory of employment : the labour market also clears , and any unemployment which remains is entirely the result of voluntary decisions by workers to withdraw from the labour market while still being officially classified as unemployed .
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