Example sentences of "to go [adv] into the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 And so , er , when th the reapers were gathering in the harvest they were not allowed to go right to the edge of the field , they had to leave a border , they were not to go right into the corners , they were to leave those areas , so that the poorer members , so that those who did not have could come and could gather what was left behind .
2 Twelve days later I received a call from an exultant Sylvia who told me that , on the previous evening , she had in fact managed to go right into the cupboard and switch off the light .
3 But , nevertheless , for me eternity was not now , and I had to go on into the future and in this world .
4 This includes considerable inspection work , firstly to establish what grinding needs to be done , and then to ensure that the body is fit , after they have completed their welding and grinding , to go on into the paint shop .
5 The tape measure had now to go down into the hollow as well as across the circle , and it was not long enough to do this .
6 And was the water there to go down into the villages ?
7 From year to year they used the same handrails to go down into the past : lifting the cartwheel at the crossroads , the drilling sessions by the river , the first ambush , marching at night between the safe houses , the different characters in the houses , the food , the girls …
8 Most of them would not go on , but three were brave enough to go down into the valley .
9 My husband was mad on golf , and he used to go down into the park and send golf balls onto the lawn and then walk back through the rose garden which I put in the wrong place .
10 Nevertheless : If a teacher has , himself , to go down into the library with the whole class , or if you can only afford a third of a teacher to be in the library at certain times , then you are quite simply restricting the amount of work that can go on .
11 Agnes stood directly in front of her mother now as she said , ‘ Would it do you any harm either to go down into the shop or to go over to the house and change the linen ?
12 ‘ Perhaps you men would like to go through into the study .
13 The photographer and his wife Jane had been about to go through into the concert hall when Leeson saw Lowell standing on his own .
14 The aim is , of course , to persuade the puppy to ask to go outside into the garden when it wants to urinate or defecate .
15 And finally to complete this particular picture , picking up again on a theme that was introduced earlier on , we are using proprietary relational database technology , so there are many other tools which are available to you , for example the ability of Lotus One Two Three to go directly into the database , pull information out , present it in a spreadsheet , present it graphically .
16 But she had no wish to go further into the pseudo-science , and did not know the hour of her birth anyway — only that she had Sol in Cancer .
17 They would n't be expecting her to go further into the lion 's den .
18 Understandably they feel that it is such an intangible asset that it is more productive to go straight into the negotiating situation and test out the reality of bargaining power .
19 He decided to go straight into the wood without consulting Bigwig , and to trust that the rest would follow .
20 One of the things that really annoyed us in the Ministry was when the Publisher 's representative used to go straight into the Minister 's office and dictate letters which the Minister then signed .
21 All the files from us , the Carabinieri , the Finance people , everything , is going to go straight into the computer .
22 Next year , I 'd like to go straight into the HNC in Health Care .
23 Eva , in her graduate 's gown , and Major and Mrs Burrows in uniform , were amongst the crowd , planning to go straight into the ceremony after the meeting .
24 You know why she did n't want us to go up into the bathroom ?
25 They 'll have to go up into the attic .
26 At the same time , she was in no hurry to go up into the pleasure dome that hung so ominous and vast above their heads .
27 The time had now come for Eric to go up into the Apennines on behalf of the Commission to pay and honour all those Italians , for the most part peasants , who had helped and in many cases saved the lives of escaping prisoners-of-war .
28 Meanwhile , I had to go up into the roof and push down the ballcock when things went wrong .
29 erm but , but certainly the , the er er the period has given the Communist Party er quite a large number of trained cadres which will be able to go out into the villages in a way that they had n't been able to in because it would , that was all too soon .
30 Indeed the anonymous reviewer of the Pope and Weiner edition went on to propose that ‘ if the police staff college is to fulfil its task [ of producing a major project ] with any credibility , it must encourage its academic staff to go out into the field to study policing at first hand ’ .
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