Example sentences of "[to-vb] [prep] it [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | At rehearsals , Les Cox agreed it would be wiser not to practise falling down the stairs as it was a skill which took months to acquire — better just to go for it on the night . |
2 | You needed to use imagination to see through it to the ground below . |
3 | It needs a powerful machine to run it at a reasonable speed but even if you do n't have such a machine you need to know about it as a sign of things to come . |
4 | Sally-Anne sometimes thought that her career as a housemaid had been sparked off by that remark as much as by anything else — that and discovering how hard life was in the East End , and her determination to write about it from the inside , rather than as a privileged outsider looking in . |
5 | In the cool light of this brighter day it was hard to conceive of it as a visitation of demons . |
6 | The party rejoined the coalition in 1921 in order to work against it from the inside . |
7 | Murray was summoned to appear before it in the spring of 1913 , but by then he was in South America acting for Lord Cowdray . |
8 | ‘ And so , ’ I continue , ‘ the suntan becomes fashionable and it 's no longer as necessary as it was — taking Robinson Crusoe by way of example — to hide from it under a parasol in order to conserve that fairness of skin threatened by the desert island climate . |
9 | It is at the level of explanation that the sexism of sociolinguistics is most blatantly on display , and I want to concentrate on it in the remainder of this section . |
10 | So if four of us were to work on it as a group , |
11 | ‘ Listen , I do n't want to talk about it on the phone . |
12 | His office would n't want to talk about it on the telephone , because my father has not been well , and at times has been behaving rather strangely . |
13 | Have to be able to talk about it to the owners tonight . |
14 | I try any watch the production at some time during the week in order to be able to talk about it to the Press . |
15 | Well , this is an issue which is sort of under debate and it 's all part of the training thing , 'cause we are going to talk about it at the Training Committee tomorrow . |
16 | ‘ I do n't want to talk about it at the moment , Stephen , if you do n't mind . ’ |
17 | Yes well erm we 're still going to have to talk about it with the elders you see . |
18 | You 'll probably want to talk about it without the embarrassment of having me here to listen . |
19 | My contact with David had fired me with an interest in Peru again , a desire to engage with it beyond the level of annoyance . |
20 | Once a decision is made it must be communicated in writing to the claimant , who then has three months in which to appeal against it to the SSAT . |
21 | But , still , he liked to hear about it from the others . |
22 | I got to hear about it from the police . ’ |
23 | It hit the platform fence and ran under the carriage ; as quick as a flash the boy darted past Charlotte and Albert and tried to look for it under the wheels . |
24 | She 's too stuck up to look for it in the back of a cab just yet , but it 'll come to it one day when she gets a few more years on her , even the milkman wo n't be safe and she 'll be grateful . |
25 | Naturally , he tried to hush it up after , but your dad got to hear of it from the doctor and he did n't half go for Josh — you can imagine . |
26 | One reason that many teachers find the idea of teaching in role worrying is that they feel that once they have embarked on a role they will have to stick with it for the rest of the lesson . |
27 | Now what I want you to do I want to just have a look at it now and I want you to play with it over the holiday on your own . |
28 | She tried lifting her skirt to fish under it for the pocket hanging over her petticoat . |
29 | However , the drafter should remember that problems frequently arise where one party to a contract seeks to escape from it on the grounds that the other is in breach of a condition , and that the time for performance of obligations ( other than payment of money ) under a commercial contract is normally " of the essence " : a failure to perform on time in accordance with the contract will therefore justify the other party in terminating the contract ( see Bunge Corpn v Tradax Export SA [ 1981 ] 1 WLR 711 ) . |
30 | Now , for the first time … they are asked to look upon it as a question of human nature , of equal interest to men and women , as a question of the heart , the soul , the affections , the whole moral being . |