Example sentences of "[noun sg] it [adj] " in BNC.

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1 and er he says there 's me , one in mention it any time you know
2 And when Mick Stockwell slid over a low cross in the 73rd minute , Kiwomya was on hand to sidefoot it past goalkeeper Nigel Spink .
3 And he 'd say just take a look through he said just any one you want he said and I 'll programme it that 'll come straight through and he sort of s six speakers fucking ridiculous .
4 As I was going up to my cell it all hit me — am I ever going to get my daughter back ?
5 So you 've got to watch what you take and if it 's not necessary you do n't take it if you 've got any sense but if you 're gon na take everything on the assumption ju just in case , the just in case , just in cases you know , do n't work all these the fail-safes ten times over you 're overloaded , ah but you 're so much unnecessary weight it all comes back unused , untouched .
6 A London chronicler , writing of events in early 1461 , talks of the northerners almost as if they were foreign enemies : ‘ it was Reported that the Quene w ’ the Northern men wold come downe to the Citie and Robbe and dispoile the Citie , and distroy it vtterly , and all the Sowth Cuntre' ( 22 , p.172 ) .
7 The presb. after serious dealing with him to convince him of the evil of the said practice , and after receiving his promise judicially not to practice it any more appoints him to be publickly rebuked before the congregation by his parish minister . "
8 The presb. after serious dealing with him to convince him of the evil of the said practice , and after receiving his promise judicially not to practice it any more appoints him to be publickly rebuked before the congregation by his parish minister . "
9 The fragmented narrative cultivated by Vargas Llosa , for example , is intended to replicate the way in which we experience real life , in that events and information are presented to us in a disjointed fashion and it is only when we have lived through the reading experience that we are able to piece it all together with the benefit of hindsight .
10 But little by little he would piece it all together .
11 She has any eye for detail and a steady hand to piece it all together .
12 Head teacher Marcus Thacker said he hoped the Roughwood Drive schoolwhich now tops the Knowsley table of arson-hit schools will finally get the £70,000 security fence it first requested four years ago .
13 Head teacher Marcus Thacker said he hoped the Roughwood Drive school which now tops the Knowsley table of arson-hit schoolswill finally get the £70,000 security fence it first requested four years ago .
14 This is because a complete rose is not usually ready to be pressed in one go , so you must condition it first by stripping it of its leaves and thorns , cutting the stem and then crushing it with a hammer , before placing it in fairly deep water .
15 And he said to me , he said if you hang on erm , he said you can borrow it and sand it all down , you know ?
16 What a mess it all was .
17 But what a mess it all was !
18 LEFT Through archaeology it possible to find out many details about ancient settlements , so that houses and the general landscape can be reconstructed fairly accurately .
19 Designed as a ‘ fun ’ aeroplane it first flew in 1934 or 1935 , subsequently being taken on by the Soviet Air Force as the standard advanced trainer for fighter pilots with production totalling 1,241 by early 1940 .
20 They seem to equate marketing with the ‘ stack it high and sell it cheap ’ philosophy of the discount supermarket .
21 The sky was the way he liked it best and thought best suited to the terrain it overcast , piled with cloud in pillars and columns and towers and ramparts , so that in places the vapour seemed not insubstantial but composed of solid masonry .
22 I do enjoy the magazine , and on the whole feel that you do a good job based on the difficulties that you must have keeping it interesting .
23 He did n't have the muscle to Dream it all up for himself .
24 And erm draw the graph for that work it all out yourself and another one .
25 It is only possible to assert that work begun with a lifting of the heart is likely to go on for longer than work begun with a contracting of the stomach , that work done with a lifting of the heart will develop further than work done with a contracting of the stomach , but there is nothing to indicate that the small amount of work which is the result of a contracting of the stomach will not be better than the large amount of work done with a lifting of the heart , than the rich development which is the likely result of work undertaken with a lifting of the heart , always bearing in mind , wrote Harsnet , and Goldberg , poring over the pages covered in his friend 's tiny handwriting , wiped the sweat from his forehead with his sleeve , glanced up at the sheet in his typewriter , always bearing in mind , he typed ( as Harsnet had written ) , that better and worse are relative terms , and that one man 's better is another man 's worse , one age 's better is another age 's worse , one civilization 's better is another civilization 's worse , better , worse , relative values , scribbled Goldberg in the margin , always bearing in mind , wrote Harsnet , that in the long run it all comes to the same thing , long run , scribbled Goldberg in the margin , same thing .
26 Even in times of peace it required constant vigilance to keep the peoples across the Rhine in check .
27 red ones , yellow ones take your pick it all depends on the length of your dick or prick .
28 And to the onlooker it all seems so grand ;
29 And tomorrow TI 's finance team it due to visit Cheltenham for a close inspection of the company it now owns .
30 The , the last time they did she , they , hang on a minute sort it all out
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