Example sentences of "[conj] it [modal v] [verb] at [art] " in BNC.
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1 | From there , it will be transported 1,000 miles overland to Chengdu , at the foot of the Tibetan Mountains , where it will reassembled at the site of a tube-making company . |
2 | The harm resulting from corporate discretion might lie in its impact on particular individuals or groups , or it might exist at a more abstract level , in the social disfiguration that the concentration of power in a small number of hands represents . |
3 | Always during this period the same paper was used , although a rumour that it would change at the next sitting was constantly promulgated by dealers who had once cheated , to discourage others from doing likewise . |
4 | If the project appraisal is flawed , or if the project only marginally exceeds the minimum rate of return specified by the organization , it is better that it should fail at the approval stage than be implemented with the risk of subsequent failure . |
5 | Their relationship was n't built on solid foundations , so it was hardly surprising , was it , that it should collapse at the first sign of trouble ? |
6 | The government has to get money from somewhere , and it is logical that it should look at the whole area of VAT . |
7 | I hope , therefore , that it will look at the opportunities for expanding the scheme . |
8 | If the agouti finds one , it is likely to find far more than it can eat at a single sitting . |
9 | This system of learning is very different for some students and it might help at the beginning of the academic year to introduce them to it in a more measured way and look at points of pressure during the year and see if they can be released without lowering standards |
10 | Really the Council is in a position where it must act upon complaint , and it must look at the complaints and comments that 's been received . |
11 | Thus , a lease for seven years " from 25 March 1970 " will begin at midnight between 25 March 1970 and 26 March 1970 ; and it will end at the stroke of midnight at the end of 25 March 1977 . |
12 | It will view the events of Maastricht as important , but as yesterday 's agenda , and it will marvel at the failure of countries and their leaders to grasp the opportunities for progress . |
13 | Now after the er there was a incident at erm the er engine shed , er the stabling of the locomotive was transferred away , erm and it used to travel at the end of the day over to the er or , or er engine shed , where it er stayed for the stayed for the night . |
14 | It might be short on intrigue and backstabbing but it would move at a cracking pace . |
15 | Despite Hugh 's remarks about downgrading our skills and devaluing wood , we are as concerned as the professional ( possible more so ) about ‘ promoting wood … as something with its own intrinsic beauty ’ , since we can put our heart into the work without worrying about whether or not it will sell , let alone whether it will sell at an ‘ economic ’ price . |
16 | He had made her whole body feel as though it would explode at the slightest caress from him . |
17 | This can take a lot of ti me as it must proceed at the person 's own pace and not fit within the time span that the helper finds convenient or thinks sufficient . |
18 | The rest of the sack matched up to the quality of manufacture and finish of the back system — as it should do at the price . |