Example sentences of "[vb -s] it [prep] a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ You do n't see a carpenter saying he wo n't build a house because he does n't like what 's next door and he 's going to wait until there 's a house with 8.3 rooms and the sun has it at a certain angle and then he 'll pound his nails and he wants billing above the plumber . ’
2 A bailor has it against a mere bailee at pleasure even if he never himself had actual possession of the goods and only acquired title by virtue of an illegal but completely executed contract of sale .
3 Having done that , it reaches one leg across to its equivalent on the other side , removes the accumulated pollen from the comb with a stiff brush that sprouts from the end of the leg and transfers it into a deep bowl lying on the outer surface of the opposite thigh .
4 She has taken some point made by a friend whom she names — milia and develops it into a full essay .
5 Measure for Measure takes this basic pattern and develops it in a new direction .
6 Other patients give a negative skin-prick test but respond positively to an intradermal test ( see p 288 ) , which is more ‘ sensitive ’ because it uses more antigen and places it in a deeper layer of the skin .
7 TRIPOS ' extensive experience and expertise in conformational searching , activity prediction , and 3D visualisation places it in a unique position to produce a single system that unites 3D searching , molecular design and analysis with proprietary activity and property prediction techniques into an effective information analysis environment .
8 Perm lotion breaks down the natural structure of your hair , then a neutraliser resets it into a new shape around a curler .
9 He holds it through a riveting performance of the Toccata , a sumptuously lyrical adagio ( although perhaps here it has more the air of an andante amabile ) and a gloriously ebullient Fugue .
10 Such a word may be useful to a literary man but it throws little light on Green 's intentions except when he uses it in a negative sense ; in one chapter he states a subject was ‘ unpicturesque and consequently not worth an artists attention ’ .
11 She handles it like a sophisticated traveller unthreatened by a new airport .
12 While , when Leeds scores a similar ( except better effort ) bollex head ( Coppell ) describes it as a lucky passage of play and not from a great footie team .
13 On patrol , Constable Keith Raw describes it as a difficult estate to police .
14 The Terrier man then kills it with a small pistol .
15 But on second thoughts he erases the remark , and replaces it with a slight smile .
16 Mention UK hip hop and he immediately denounces it as a pale imitation of the ‘ real thing ’ .
17 So she approaches it in a better frame of mind .
18 It collects light over its area and concentrates it on a smaller area of retina .
19 Above all , it 's a relaxing therapy and she sees it as a major way of helping a runner ‘ warm down ’ .
20 Some cover may be withdrawn as the insurance company sees it as a greater risk .
21 When Mitchell nabs a Mafia gangster and cop killer the district attorney 's office sees it as a perfect opportunity to exercise the death penalty .
22 And although Platinum has , like the spreadsheet solution that preceded it , some limitations , he sees it as a good basis for future developments .
23 HW = Husband sees it as the wife 's decision HJ = Husband sees it as a joint decision HH = Husband sees it as the husband 's decision WW = Wife sees it as the wife 's decision WJ = Wife sees it as a joint decision WH = Wife sees it as the husband 's decision .
24 HW = Husband sees it as the wife 's decision HJ = Husband sees it as a joint decision HH = Husband sees it as the husband 's decision WW = Wife sees it as the wife 's decision WJ = Wife sees it as a joint decision WH = Wife sees it as the husband 's decision .
25 Byrne ( 1986 , p. 299 ) sees it as a constitutional change such that ‘ central government , in relation to local government has come to resemble the Big Brother of George Orwell 's Nineteen Eighty Four ’ , while Newton and Karran ( 1985 , ch. 8 ) compare it to ‘ Knee-Capping Local Government ’ .
26 Even the exacting Mary Crawford sees it as a desirable prize , ‘ a park , a real park five miles round , a spacious modern-built house , so well placed and well screened as to deserve to be in any collection of engravings of gentlemen 's seats in the kingdom ’ ; the absence of family portraits does not deter her .
27 In the situations where the actor does not desire the result , but merely sees it as a foreseeable outcome of his conduct , the House of Lords has said that there is merely evidence from which the tribunal of fact can infer that he intends .
28 The community interpretation of the private language argument sees it as a direct consequence of Wittgenstein 's thoughts about rules , rule-following and objectivity .
29 But the reader gains as well , because he sees it from a different angle .
30 But the reader gains as well because he sees it from a different angle .
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