Example sentences of "[vb -s] it [vb infin] the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Nor does it contemplate the knock-on consequences for Labour ministers of attempting to implement their programme while rebuilding the governmental machine . |
2 | Nor does it want the German tail to wag the European dog . |
3 | Nor does it accommodate the traditional costumes or a tired , very conventional acting style . |
4 | If you copy it to a different place , does it leave the blank formulas |
5 | What does it benefit the British people of Northern Ireland ( for the Ulster-born members of the IRA are British whether they like it or not ) randomly to murder British children in Warrington ? |
6 | Not until it is four or five months old does it discover the remarkable fact that water can be sniffed up into a trunk and then , if you blow out , you can hose it into your mouth . |
7 | ‘ But how does it catch the last fish without losing those its already caught ? ’ |
8 | Not only does it neutralize the free lime , but also seals the pool by internal glazing . |
9 | Neither does it deny the ageing process , or the ultimate destination of life itself . |
10 | Not only does it invert the natural sequence of events in a given life by interpreting origins and development in the light of conclusions ( teleological falsification ) ; it also selects particular ideas , events and utterances for interpretation within the framework of a preferred intellectual system ( ideological falsification ) . |
11 | and Aconite , nor does it have the general disturbance ; the aching limbs , the general soreness , the fever and thirst . |
12 | This part of the city lacks the individual character of Robyn 's own suburb , where healthfood stores and sportswear boutiques and alternative bookshops have sprung up to cater for the students and liberal-minded yuppies who live there ; and still more does it lack the green amenities of the residential streets around the University . |
13 | If that makes that happen that way what makes it go the opposite way ? |
14 | The rhythmic movement of volumes and planes in space is so basic in Cézanne 's design that it usually extends to the treatment of the background — whether that be sky , wall or drapery — and makes it serve the dual purpose of a screenlike area or space boundary and of a rhythmic sequence of semivoluminous planes which continue the movement of the units in the middleground and foreground ; this sequential ordering thus contributes to compositional unity in the widest sense as well as to the expressive movement of the total form . |