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14 Sentences With "look into things"

How to use look into things in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "look into things" and check conjugation/comparative form for "look into things". Mastering all the usages of "look into things" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"The fake news doesn't look into things like that," he said.
The party seemed content with waiting for the Ethics Committee to look into things.
It really comes down to how deeply people look into things and what they see.
President Trump often asks other leaders to look into things that are important to our companies.
"I know people look into things quite a bit and come up with theories," Smith says.
"We have now received requests from a number of government representatives and committees to look into things like digital advertising," he told reporters.
"That's going to come from what their instructions are and how much liberty they feel that they have to look into things," said Zaid.
But when you look into things more, you'll find that a lot of home security devices including cameras require a monthly subscription for you to get any utility out of them.
After that, the company will look into things like purchasing wholesale businesses — deals that she said are possible in part because of their valuable private stock, which it seems as though, these days, every investor and broker wants to somehow buy.
The answers don't yield much new info (especially in its answers to antitrust questions), but it does give a look into things that are often overlooked about Facebook -- like the full extent of the granular info the company collects on its users.
No, of course not, your article shows you didn't bother to actually look into things, you just blindly marched into a retailer with $2,000 and they sold you top-end parts, laughing their asses off in the back room after you left, I imagine.
The two left, suggesting that Lincoln ought to look into things himself. After receiving Lincoln's telegram, Burnside headed to the White House himself to investigate. The president told him that two generals who would remain anonymous had told him about his plans and the army's deteriorating condition. Burnside angrily protested that these officers, whoever they were, deserved to be court- martialed.
In Scarecrow, Schofield calls Fairfax asking him to look into things surrounding a bounty on his head, including Knight's history. Schofield sends him to locate Thompson Oliphant, a former USAMRMC scientist on the bounty list, and is berated by his superior for insubordination before he leaves. As he arrives, another bounty hunter called the Zulu appears and attacks Oliphant, and Fairfax attempts to escape with Oliphant in an ambulance. However the Zulu keeps up with them, and Fairfax manages to kill the Zulu by releasing the ambulance's gurney so that he fell to the ground beneath the teetering vehicle.
At the very least, you eventually get bored by thinking about anxious topics and want to move on.” In a Publishers Weekly essay on “Why I Write”, Keyes wrote, “Writing gives me license to look into things I’d like to look into anyway, such as quotations, language use and word origins.” Editors of quotation books such as The Yale Book of Quotations (Fred Shapiro), Random House Webster’s Quotationary (Leonard Roy Frank), The New Beacon Book of Quotations by Women (Rosalie Maggio), and Winston Churchill by Himself (Richard Langworth) have credited Keyes’s books on the origins of quotations with helping them research their own. When his book “Nice Guys Finish Seventh” was published in 1992, Fred Shapiro, editor of The Yale Book of Quotations, judged it to have “the best research of any quotation book ever published.” In an early Contemporary Authors entry about him, Keyes said that he enjoyed researching his books as much as writing them.

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