Example sentences of "[verb] it [modal v] [verb] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 I do n't know it would have on the date actually .
2 ‘ I expect it 'll come to the same thing in the end , ’ Zen told him as they shook hands .
3 Critics say it should apply along the whole stretch .
4 If the bill were to be passed as it now stands it would result in the restriction , and even removal , of presently existing freedoms for evangelistic work .
5 First , an increasing gap opened up between the new scientific understanding of the universe as developed by men like Copernicus , Galileo and Newton , and the picture which orthodoxy generally believed it could find in the Bible , especially in the accounts of creation in the first two chapters of Genesis .
6 If the Government spends less than the budget says it would spend during the year , then it is obviously better off at the end of the year and can then spend more or repay borrowings or reduce taxes .
7 POSC says it 'll call for the development of a set of industry-specific widgets next year when a more complete range of interface recommendations will be presented .
8 Although the charge card industry says it will benefit from the move away from credit cards , it is unlikely to take on the mass of consumers who acquired a credit card in the Eighties .
9 And today Robin Cook pledged that Labour would try to fund the post out of an extra £1 billion it says it will spend on the NHS .
10 The firm involved is moving its headquarters out of Britain , and says it will help with the transfer as much as possible , but the news has been greeted with dismay by local business leaders .
11 ICS says it will work on the design , specification , implementation and testing of the Workspace Manager technology for Motif .
12 Harris reports that UPS is already following this policy in Germany , and says it could spread to the U.K. The German vans use off-the-shelf diesel engines and gearboxes .
13 If one is threatened it can call upon the other 's aid and give a ‘ protected threat ’ to its adversary .
14 I imagine it must seem like the blink of an eye to a ghost , do n't you ? ’
15 The developers hope it will link with the existing Magnetic Imaging Centre , which already operates a sophisticated body scanner .
16 The brushwood groynes 200 yards off-shore hold the sediment as the tide retreats through them and NRA officials hope it will lead to the development of new saltmarsh to reduce the impact of waves hitting the sea wall .
17 So there 's an example of where it 's happening and I hope it will happen over the whole field .
18 ‘ The AS/400 team has said it will move to the RISC architecture , which will allow it to increase the performance of its current microprocessor technology for a lower cost , ’ he said .
19 She said the SSI has said it will look into the matter .
20 The door crashed open and slammed back against the wall with such force it seemed it would come off the hinges .
21 The Commission stated that it was not at present in a position to indicate which measures it might propose to the Council in that report .
22 Sun reckons it can succeed in the PC business because the market is changing .
23 He reckons it will disappear by the end of 1993 , so increased demand will then spill over into higher prices .
24 Winston Churchill ( C , Davyhulme ) said : ‘ If it was nothing other than a short-term political fix I do not believe it would get through the House of Commons .
25 And he 's convinced it will pull in the customers .
26 Westland claimed it could rely upon the arbitral clause within the contract to bring an action for breach of contract against both the Organisation and the member States .
27 The train had already left Sion when the avalanche struck and with the possibility of further minor falls it had retreated to the sanctuary of the station where the passengers were told it would remain for the rest of the night .
28 The adjustment to the indicative price is an art in that the purchaser takes account of the cost saving benefits it can bring to the vendor 's business , potential profit increases arising from market synergies and identified liabilities which may affect future profitability .
29 Even now I am looking through the chapter on the ‘ law ’ again : the question of colonial robbery ( p. 62 ) , ‘ the alienation … of the surplus product from all pre-socialist forms ’ ( p. 62 ) , ‘ the taxation of private capitalist profit ’ ( p. 64 ) , the question of state loans ( pp. 64–65 ) , currency emission ( p. 65 ) , railway tariffs ( p. 70 ) , the monopoly of the banking system and the credit policy ( pp. 70–73 ) , home and foreign trade ( pp. 73–84 ) , the ‘ prices policy ’ ( sic pp. 84–89 ) , and so on and so forth , with further argument on the theme that socialism is fighting against capitalism and in order to win it must accumulate at the expense of the private economy — and the more the better — this is the entire content of the work .
30 You do n't need it then it just goes , you know it can go into the
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