Example sentences of "[noun] [vb -s] it to the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 My conception of sport elevates it to the realms of art , where the producer finds room to express himself and the consumer studies and appreciates ; both seek satisfaction .
2 The final contents of the budget are only revealed to the Cabinet the day before the Chancellor presents it to the House of Commons , when it is too late for any major changes .
3 Regan declares it to the man himself ( V.i.6ff. ) , as the egoism they each pursue turns the two sisters into deadly rivals ( 15f. , 18f . ) .
4 In the new company , Gardner Merchant Services Group , the managers have an initial eight per cent stake , with the prospect of up to 20 per cent if their performance over the next five years justifies it to the rest of the equity holders .
5 Clegg ( 1976 ) maintains that power within unions is concentrated at the level at which bargaining is typically conducted ( although this is not the only influence ) , so that ‘ industry bargaining concentrates power at the centre [ and promotes integrated , bureaucratic union government ] , whereas bargaining at lower levels disperses it to the regions or branches ’ ( p. 54 ) .
6 And Miss gives it to the student in n it ?
7 The path then continues straight , towards the pass and here a less distinct path leaves it to the right .
8 Its privileged position entitles it to the designation of paramount reality .
9 With open questions the researcher leaves it to the respondents as to how they word their answers .
10 If , in these cases , the creditor leaves it to the debtor to procure the third party to provide the security , it is , in my opinion , almost inconceivable that the approach referred to by Dixon J. would be adopted so as to enable the surety to repudiate liability .
11 The debtor is not , in general , the agent of the creditor whether or not the creditor leaves it to the debtor to procure the third party security .
12 ( 3 ) Where the creditor leaves it to the debtor to obtain the signature of a third party surety on documents of guarantee or on documents charging the surety 's principal or important asset , it exposes itself to the possibility of being restrained under applicable equitable doctrines .
13 The Labour party owes it to the House and the country to tell us freely , frankly and openly where it stands .
14 But Poulantzas argues that the attribution of the power to manipulate to the ruling class elevates it to the status of a subject — an agent who does things — and thereby reintroduces the idea of collective intensions which cry out for individualist explanation .
15 The very shabbiness of Hamley Hall in Wives and Daughters endears it to the reader ; its neglected beauty makes it a home as the grand and prosperous Towers is not .
16 The trouble with notes and letters is that you are never sure that each child receives a copy , that the copy makes it to the pocket or the school bag , survives the journey home , is actually discovered by the parent and the message understood .
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