Example sentences of "[conj] it [verb] the new [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The company says that it sees the new polymers eventually being used to replace main random access memory as well as rotating secondary store .
2 The Reformation Parliament of 1529 to 1536 attacked the ‘ privileges of Rome ’ and its jurisdiction of the Church , so it recognised the new marriage of the King to Anne Boleyn , in January 1533 .
3 The Association feared that if floodlighting caught on , clubs would be drawn into spending too much money , and it banned the new lights at Highbury from being used for official matches .
4 Usually it brings fine weather and it starts the new knitting year .
5 Tolonen was to step back into the job , but it seems the new T'ang wants a new man in the post . ’
6 It sold more $500,000-plus machines in fourth quarter 1992 than the three previous quarters combined and looks forward to being able to use Pentium in its machines , because it says the new Intel Corp chip will reduce the gap between its machines and RISC in batch processing work .
7 Her eyes leapt from Abraham begat Isaac and Isaac begat Jacob to Verse 25 of the Gospel According to St Matthew , to which she had turned simply because it began the New Testament and she had been unable to make anything of the Old .
8 More than 700 farmers gave their backing to the Carlisle mart firm Harrison & Hetherington which had called the meeting because it believes the new system could paralyse cattle marketing .
9 This was critical , since it took the new tax from being a hybrid to being a loosely-disguised property tax .
10 IBM Corp last week took its first step towards saving the AS/400 from going the way of the mainframe when it accompanied the new F models with a string of software offerings and initiatives designed to make the machine sit more comfortably as a database server in an open systems environment .
11 She did n't even know at what point friendship had turned into love , and if she had realised it when it happened the new bud of feeling might have blossomed crazily into hopeless longing and tongue-tied need … or perhaps it would have frosted away and died .
12 As it happened the new ramp section was only just rescued from a bulldozer in the nick of time as the skate scene said a final goodbye to Andover skatepark .
13 In the aristocracy this was often external obeisance , but even this was significant , for it underlined the new power of the bourgeoisie , industrially powerful , and from the 1830s politically influential but often morally anxious , particularly under the impact of political instability and economic uncertainty .
  Next page