Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [to-vb] it [prep] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It is probably best to acknowledge the barrier and so seek to make it into part of the perceptual bubble .
2 I 've always much preferred to sell it to friends .
3 ‘ Moreton is obviously trying to make it with Sally Drayton , you idiot , and you are the competition .
4 No cos you , you only have to have it on volume three to get the same amount of noise out instead of volume two .
5 Yet she only wanted to do it with Lord George .
6 He did not want to do it in front of the crowd .
7 Greeks with money do not want to put it into building factories .
8 You may not need to do it in Scotland as well to the in England .
9 Distamycin A tends to lack stability in aqueous solution and it is not recommended to store it in solution .
10 ‘ You 're not going to make it to retirement taking risks like that , ’ Benny chastised him .
11 So it is not as though it 's a young player who 's going out of the game and you 're telling them I 'm sorry your not going to make it with Warwickshire .
12 There are a few well-rehearsed cases in which all the information provided by a text is not used to interpret it For example , people often fail to see what is wrong with asking of an air crash on a national frontier ‘ where were the survivors buried ? ’ or they fail to see why saying that a book ‘ fills a much-needed gap ’ is an insult to its author .
13 The House of Lords held , in effect , that since the applicant was arguing that he had a contractual right under his lease to remain at the lower rent , he was asserting private law rights and so could raise the defence in the possession proceedings in the County Court and did not have to raise it by means of an AJR .
14 He felt a stab of desire for her once again , but , this time , did not try to put it into words .
15 Since France did not receive any substantial support for this scheme it did not try to propose it on behalf of the EEC .
16 And one of the students piped up : ‘ Well , you 'll just have to play it by ear ! ’
17 ‘ We 'll just have to play it by ear .
18 It seems to me indisputable that , in our culture , adolescence constitutes just such a crisis — perhaps for many people the major one — but because it is one with which we are all familiar , I do not intend to delineate it in detail .
19 Mrs said th , there 's too much of a confidential nature goes on in school and , I 'm not allowed to do it at school .
20 Yeah but after this month they 're not allowed to do it after November .
21 Well they 're not allowed to wear it at St Bosworths .
22 Dad 's not allowed to take it to work unfortunately so
23 And they 've got all the places say do n't lean your bicycle here and you 're not allowed to take it into Jackson
24 I should not wish the young King to know about it or see , for he would not find it to his liking ; but I fear , so white is the stone , that he can not fail to see it from Mathefelon .
25 Milton Keynes is about as far from the sea as it is possible to get in England , and Roger Mason 's motivation in coming to us was never quite clear to me ( perhaps it was n't to him either , for although after four intensive years ' research he produced a many-hundred page ‘ draft ’ of his thesis , far in excess of what might be required , he finally failed to submit it for examination ) .
26 Cos we 've still got to put it in drums to take it from from to one .
27 If the Justice of the Forest discovered that a wood was without a woodward , or that a woodward had not taken the oath or had not appeared at the Forest Eyre to be sworn , or neglected his duty , or committed trespasses in the forest , the wood in question was seized for the king , but the owner was usually allowed to recover it on payment of a fine .
28 He has still tried to clear it into Washington Road but failed .
29 Always trying to blame it on Man , as if God had nothing whatsoever to do with it .
30 And whatever it was , Slorne now tried to communicate it to Creggan .
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