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

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1 In the short term it proposes increased monitoring to ensure that the highest standards of pesticide use are maintained .
2 For the short term it sees patchy signs of improvement and no speedy recovery .
3 Nonetheless , the significance of Lukacs 's theory is that even in a post-Stalinist epoch it presents socialist realism as rich in possibilities .
4 While there are obviously problems in developing and using this type of notional scale it has some utility .
5 At a superficial level it produces incompatible definitions so that , despite their having the word in common , Thompson and Anderson use ‘ class ’ in different ways .
6 Birthplace of the Industrial Revolution it boasts award-winning museums , heritage sites and first-class accommodation in beautiful Shropshire countryside .
7 The only , the only thing it has short days
8 Being an alkaline-loving plant it requires some calcium content .
9 This is a large monkey-eating species of tropical forests ( Praed & Grant , 1962 ) , but in more open country it takes small antelopes and hyraxes .
10 However , the enforcement agent in a compliance system regards prosecution as a sign of failure , where in a sanctioning system it becomes visible evidence that he has done his job .
11 In the New Testament it means total allegiance .
12 Liturgy has power to blend people into community and in the Catholic school it harnesses active participation between pupil and teacher both in preparation and celebration .
13 When the Bank of England issues new currency it obtains interest-earning government securities in return .
14 Quality : If a firm makes a component rather than buys it from an external party it has greater control over the quality of the component .
15 On the one hand claiming Darlington is in such a bad state it needs more Government help , on the other claiming the town is a thriving local centre .
16 This type of remembering , which comes unbidden , through the sense of taste or touch or smell , is what Marcel of course calls ‘ involuntary ’ or ‘ affective memory ’ , and in contrast to intellectual memory it recaptures past experience in its lived immediacy .
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