Example sentences of "it [adj] in " in BNC.
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1 | Who would have thought it possible in a boring little town like Surrey Hills ? |
2 | Only if productivity increases is it possible in the long-run for both groups to be successful . |
3 | I offer as an example some of my own Inspector Ghote novels , particularly the early ones , since I have found it possible in recent years to shift , as it were , Ghote 's character into higher , more serious gear . |
4 | Whatever advantages there may be to the shareholders in the adoption of one or other of these goals as the object of directors ' duties , liability rules , as will be shown in more detail in section II , are too unsophisticated a control technique to make it possible in practice to discriminate between them . |
5 | How was it possible in the late 1980s to put Trident into a bargaining regime , when we will not possess it until late 1994 ? |
6 | The diagnostic test needed is obviously something like the following : Given a situation where a phrase composed of adjective A and noun N can correctly apply to something perceived by the speaker , is it possible in principle to say the following truthfully : " This N is A " ? |
7 | The new constitution of the Labour Party made it possible in 1918 for members to join local labour parties without being enrolled in an affiliated organization . |
8 | She showed us the map on the last day before it due in eight o'clock |
9 | No it 's best leave it dry in a separate |
10 | A local authority may therefore find it preferable in the case of transient odours to serve a prohibition notice under s.1 of the Public Health ( Recurring Nuisances ) Act 1969 . |
11 | You do n't think about anything else apart from getting it right in front of the cameras . ’ |
12 | She said : ‘ One of my slogans was , ‘ If the Tories have n't got it right in 13 years , then they never will . ’ |
13 | If they ca n't get it right in 13 years , they never will . |
14 | It is a vastly complex process and unless you get it right in one , you will never live to tell the tale , to get it right the next time , in order to ‘ evolve ’ the skill ! |
15 | You can get it right in one operation without having to go through any menus . ’ |
16 | No doubt he 'll get it right in time for his second edition ; if there is one . |
17 | I have backed Kendall to get it right in this column down the months . |
18 | a lot of it is er propaganda by the Conservative if , if they were gon na get it right , why could n't they get it right in the thirteen years that they 've been in power ? |
19 | I said if the transport get that load of L T M thrown back Robin is gon na get it right in the neck ! |
20 | it 's alright the other one was her affair with the Governor of Tennessee , I 'll get it right in a minute |
21 | We 'll get it right in a minute . |
22 | Robert Service may not have struck it rich in finding Yukon gold , but he made a fortune from his books of verse , which sold into millions of copies . |
23 | The American government owns one-third of the nation 's land , much of it rich in resources . |
24 | Centuries ago the birds themselves chose Low Island as a sanctuary and the droppings over the years made it rich in guano — a fertiliser . |
25 | Hirst 's combination with Mark Bright is developing and the former Crystal Palace striker 's goal made it eight in 14 games for Wednesday . |
26 | I had persuaded myself that there was no such long-continued action on this dictum as to render it improper in this House to reconsider the question . |
27 | Is it claustrophobic in , in the breathing apparatus ? |
28 | But , but , but from the em from the employers point of view , what he stands to lose if that person 's away from work , I mean , all all all the er , chap 's gon na lose is his , his income so , if he was doing it this in his own case , he would be looking to replace . |
29 | ( e ) for any other reason the Council thinks it proper in the public interest not to recognise the body . |
30 | If Leland had gone there , he might well have described the eastern Weald as he did the Forest of Dean : ‘ more fruitful of wood and grass than corn ’ with ‘ many iron mines and forges ’ ; yet although he judged it self-sufficient in corn , Dean was very much poorer than the Weald . |