Example sentences of "[prep] it [noun pl] " in BNC.
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1 | The summit of this very steep grade was in the tunnel and once out of it engines would shut off to get their breath back . |
2 | Further , it seems likely that although it may have been the case in the earlier nineteenth century that the proportion of the English population living in the higher-waged North increased both as a result of a higher natural rate of increase and from in-migration , in 1801 53 per cent of the population still lived south of the Severn/Wash line , while north of it counties like Herefordshire and Worcestershire were not high-waged . |
3 | You remember it the razzmatazz no trade union involvement , involved keep out of it boys , we 'll deal with it . |
4 | The Leeds Permanent has converted 90 per cent of it members to fixed payments since last year . |
5 | ‘ If you 're a dud you can make a lot of money out of it kickbacks , mileages and second homes , employing your wife as a secretary . |
6 | And , as we have seen , on the face of it things have moved on a little in the direction that the British would wish . |
7 | Should have got rid of it years ago , but had n't . |
8 | ‘ It is — I just wish I 'd thought of it years ago . ’ |
9 | ‘ Some of it really moves me , and some of it cracks me up — kinda what you go through at a birthday party . ’ |
10 | ‘ Some of it really moves me , and some of it cracks me up — kinda what you go through at a birthday party . ’ |
11 | I thought of it weeks ago . |
12 | SAG , seen by many as the only independent standards body opposing IBM 's hegemonic database infrastructure , has DEC , Informix Software , Oracle Corp , Microsoft Corp , Locus Computing Corp , and X/Open amongst it members . |
13 | Indeed Monteverdi produced a classic early example of the strophic-variation solo aria over a marching ostinato he had come near it years before in ‘ Qual honor ’ in Orfeo ( see p. 274 ) — in ‘ Ohime ch'io cado ’ . |
14 | Every change in our lives brings with it griefs , even changes for the better . |
15 | This discovery , that a combination can be stronger than a single individual , or a couple , marked a major step in humanity 's development as a species , but carried with it restrictions over sexual activity , because this leads to two people aiming to be independent from everyone else . |
16 | Views of N C V O are based upon policy analysis and development work , with it members , and the wider national and local voluntary sector . |
17 | Effective though it proved , the device of holding down output in the hope of driving up prices brought with it problems not to be found in any economics textbook : the global output ceiling , if set realistically in relation to demand , can easily prove too small to be divided amicably . |
18 | Those who commit these crimes must be pursued most vigorously under the criminal law ; if they are allowed to get away with it others will take encouragement to follow their example . |
19 | The advantage however is accidental , and brings with it difficulties of its own ; assuming that matter , unlike ch'i , is inert until moved , it took some time to arrive at the thought of inertia as either rest or uniform motion in a straight line . |
20 | Administrative help from Smolensk brought with it obligations , such as ‘ compulsory self-taxation ’ ( samooblozhenie ) for the peasant committees . |
21 | The exercise of these freedoms , since it carries with it duties and responsibilities , may be subject to such formalities , conditions , restrictions or penalties as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society , in the interests of national security , territorial integrity or public safety , for the prevention of disorder or crime , for the protection of health or morals , for the protection of the reputation or rights of others , for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence , or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary . |
22 | Article 10(2) requires that ‘ since it [ freedom of expression ] carries with it duties and responsibilities ’ it |
23 | The European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms , to which the United Kingdom is signatory , enshrines the right to freedom of expression , but acknowledges the extent to which its exercise carries with it duties and responsibilities , including the ‘ prevention of disorder and crime ’ and the ‘ protection of health or morals ’ . |
24 | The exercise of these freedoms , since it carries with it duties and responsibilities , amy be subject to such formalities , conditions , restrictions or penalties as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society … for the protection of health … |
25 | The exercise of these freedoms , since it carries with it duties and responsibilities , may be subject to such formalities , conditions , restrictions or penalties as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society … for the protection of the reputation or rights of others … |
26 | The exercise of these freedoms , since it carries with it duties and responsibilities , may be subject to such formalities , conditions , restrictions or penalties as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society , in the interests of national security , territorial integrity or public safety , for the prevention of disorder or crime , for the protection of health or morals , for the protection of the reputation or rights of others , for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence , or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary . |
27 | Article 10(2) sets out the qualifications in detail : " The exercise of these freedoms , since it carries with it duties and responsibilities , may be subject to such formalities , conditions , restrictions or penalities as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society , in the interests of national security , territorial integrity or public safety , for the prevention of disorder or crime , for the protection of health or morals , for the protection of the reputation or rights of others , for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary . " |
28 | It will be suggested here that , because each one of these terms carries with it connotations regarding what these processes are , ‘ learning ’ , ‘ acquisition ’ and ‘ development ’ are associated with different accounts of developmental change . |
29 | well I do n't know , but could do with it years ago |
30 | Scientism is a not-unattractive doctrine , and was especially so to a rising professional middle-class who associated with it theories of eugenics and of mankind which gave them a pleasing sense of class and racial superiority ; but in the later nineteenth century there was no reason to anticipate these darker sides of progress . |