Example sentences of "[adv] it [verb] an [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 And obviously it reaches an awful lot of people , because Community Centres cater for all ages .
2 A bird kept in captivity is fed all year round , so obviously it has an easier time than one in the wild which has to feed itself whatever the season , but it still has the hunting instinct .
3 It was in front of 72,000 people in the Stadium , half a billion people around the world and so it took an incredible amount of getting hold of myself to do it .
4 So it produces an odd sensation to learn , again from Anna , that this superstition was in fact Dostoevsky 's .
5 Nevertheless it remains an excellent opening strike because , even more than the snap punch , it cocks the hips for a powerful reverse punch .
6 Finally it suggests an alternative approach to the standard studies of ‘ white collar crime ’ and the limits of legal regulation .
7 An inquest jury at Buckingham was told that a 3 year old boy may have dropped the baby on the floor , but yesterday it returned an open verdict after the Coroner Rodney Corner warned that the evidence was contradictory .
8 An inquest jury at Buckingham was told that a 3 year old boy may have dropped the baby on the floor , but yesterday it returned an open verdict after the Coroner Rodney Corner warned that the evidence was contradictory .
9 This not only involved the SCCs in vocational guidance and after-care in a formal sense prior to the creation of juvenile labour exchanges , but also it provided an influential role for the ASEA , certainly for its practice .
10 The Child Support er Act says that when a Child Support Assessment is carried out it supersedes an existing court order .
11 Now it seems an odd decision because the film was such a big success , but I did n't want to be under contract to anyone for any length of time with whom I did n't feel much in common .
12 A POTAGER was just a grand name for a plot , where vegetables were grown to make soup ( potage ) , but now it means an ornamental vegetable garden .
13 Overall it offers an acceptable balance between performance , practically and weight .
14 I always use this kind of music as part of the test sequence ; here it had an extraordinary naturalness , a quite seamless integration from bass to soprano , which one immediately recognises as true .
15 When plugged in , a tongue would stick out of the apparatus ; additionally it contained an electric device that was intended to block television reception in the immediate area .
16 Eventually it reaches an open stretch of water which mirrors forests , mountains and the vast sky .
17 From then on it becomes an arctic scene .
18 It started out as a little ripple in the sea then it became an enormous wave it rose into the air then smashed against the breaker , the breaker broke into two .
19 If reality is an illusion that we create — no more ‘ real ’ than Middle Earth or Valhalla — then it raises an important question .
20 Instead it adopted an expansive interpretation , requiring anyone who obtained possession of material nonpublic information from a corporation to disclose this information to the market .
21 Either it permits an obdurate East Berlin leadership to continue , at the risk of deeper disaffection among the population and growing isolation among its allies , or it encourages reform , and risks destroying the fragile foundations of East German statehood entirely .
22 Yet it seemed an odd relationship .
23 yet it introduces an obvious conflict of interest .
24 The Death of Nelson is the most successful of Minton 's large-scale narrative paintings , yet it invites an ambivalent response .
25 I did not see the production until the following Christmas , when it contained an amusing touch which I imagine John must have added that year , after Leonide Massine had revived The Three-cornered Hat at Covent Garden : Hansel and Gretel danced a few steps with a bunch of grapes , a good-humoured quotation from the dance of the miller and his wife in Massine 's ballet .
26 We 're going to be looking at Lewes in the period during the late middle ages , early modern period , when it had an unchartered corporation , how the town was governed and so on .
27 We 're going to be looking at Lewes in the period during the late middle ages , early modern period when it had an unchartered corporation , how the town was governed and so on .
28 This deterioration and the progressive proletarianization of the artisanate was to be particularly noticeable in Catalonia , where it represented an inevitable stage in the growth of capitalist industry : hence the outbreaks of Luddism in the 1840's .
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