Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [prep] it [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | I 've only heard of it at the fashion college . |
2 | That conflict of views has its fierce advocates on both sides , and I am neither well informed nor dispassionate enough to comment on it From the presumed perspective of John Howard , the Ellis-Beto administrations overall emerge with credit , because they did insist on the publication of official rules , and that was a big breakthrough . |
3 | Had he not , through the magnetic influence he was able to exert even over those of his own race , personally seen to it at the Peace Conference that these Arabs were not sent unrewarded away ? |
4 | I do not have the room to articulate this opposition here , but only to point to it via the already observed generalising tendency in de Man 's thought . |
5 | With any luck , it should not need much doing to it over the next few years . |
6 | ‘ Well , there was a little problem , but I do n't think I 'd better talk about it on the phone . ’ |
7 | It will have to be answered , so we had better talk about it in the shelter of our homes , and in the morning we can send and tell him what we think . ’ |
8 | The Captain did n't even know his name since the fight had happened in another part of the city and he had only read about it in the papers . |
9 | ‘ 2.4 million people done those Italians last weekend , I just read about it in the Daily Mirror . |
10 | 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 . |
11 | Yes you normally pay for it in the following year . |
12 | They must therefore retain the property to which an infant is entitled till he attains full age , and meanwhile deal with it under the directions of the will or settlement or under the orders of the court . |
13 | She 'd just slipped into it over the years . |
14 | There 'll be plenty of atmosphere , even just flogging round it in the cloud , ’ we agreed , pulling into the clammy , deserted car park at Pen y Pas with hearts in boots . ’ |
15 | I did n't know what stall , type of stall she had I just read about it in the paper |
16 | Given that Scotland has little going for it in the way of geography , nothing special in the natural resources department compared with the seriously oil-rich countries and now a minimal industrial base , he argues that the asset in which we have consistently under-invested is our people . |
17 | The bird has a piercing yellow eye and I think an older generation of wild-fowlers still refers to it as the golden-eye although that name , strictly speaking , belongs to an entirely different species . |
18 | Now assign a system-wide logical name to the storage directory ; you will always refer to it by the logical name from within LIFESPAN . |
19 | Dann turned the gun in his hands , still staring at it in the passing flares of street lighting . |
20 | And very quickly talking about it amongst the staff and er the other committees it would seem that it ought to have a far broader remit than just on the racing side so the first thing that I 'd like to emphasise is that this year of youth sailing is involves all the outgoing grass roots divisions of the R Y A , that is windsurfing , racing , training and the development divisions and the regions and the clubs and the recognized teaching establishments , so it really is an all encompassing er er scheme . |
21 | Its door , as expected , was ajar , and after checking the street Huy quickly slipped through it into the twilit interior . |
22 | I always think of it as the engine-room of the house . |
23 | The Allegro assai that follows this piece probably belongs with it as the second movement of a two movement sonata . |
24 | • Your complexion deserves make-up which not only improves its appearance but also cares for it throughout the day , so RoC 's foundations are designed to do just that . |
25 | He could quite clearly see through it to the crushed grass on which it lay but , when he gingerly touched a scale that was a mere golden sheen on thin air , it felt solid enough . |
26 | an inscription on the Monument which was not finally removed until 1831 imputed the blame for the Great Fire of London ( 1666 ) to treacherous Roman Catholics , and Pope indignantly alludes to it in the third of his Moral Essays ( ll. 339–40 ) : ‘ Where London 's column , pointing at the skies , / Like a tall bully , lifts its head and lies . ’ |
27 | He 'd probably die for it in the end . |
28 | While Alex Higgins reckons snooker can seriously damage your health , Davis is positively thriving on it at the moment . |
29 | Had Louis been inclined to forget the destiny his father had mapped out for him , he would have been forcefully reminded of it in the last decade of his reign , when his chief adviser was Suger , abbot of St Denis between 1122 and 1151 , a man of humble birth consumed by a passionate devotion to the cause of monarchy in the Carolingian mould . |
30 | And it 's erm it 's so oppressive and we really worry about it with the children . |