Example sentences of "[adv] [vb past] [verb] it [prep] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | Only got to do it for a second . |
2 | But they only started to perfect it at the end of the nineteenth century . |
3 | No it does all over the place , wherever put newspaper down , he does it on the carpet so kept doing it by the cooker so we put newspaper down there , and put the toys away , see they was in the way you see , put newspaper down there and then next would n't have that , . |
4 | She only had to make it to the airlock , seal the inner door behind her and wait … . |
5 | After a little more than a year , she alone had transformed it into a place where the children could play in safety , a stretch of patchy grass with a few well-cared-for roses round its border , and an immensely high wall skirting the garden from one end to the other . |
6 | So that that just stopped did it in the end . |
7 | Well that shows us what a dramatist was lost to the English stage when Milton finally decided to write it as an epic and not as a play . |
8 | I rather thought just wanted to contrast it with the other case and er it may not be obvious to the jury but why , why did you want a shot gun that 's a little shorter ? |
9 | And the recreation committee yesterday agreed to replace it with a new wooden one costing £9,500 . |
10 | They always forgot to send it with the papers . |
11 | The poor little cat had never got over its terror of flying , and Mildred always had to prise it from the broomstick whenever she arrived anywhere . |
12 | ‘ I 've known and loved it over the years , and always wanted to put it on an album . |
13 | Logique du sens causes us to reflect on matters that philosophy has neglected for many centuries : the event ( assimilated in a concept , from which we vainly attempted to extract it in the form of a fact , verifying a proposition , of actual experience , a modality of the subject , of concreteness , the empirical content of history ) ; and the phantasm ( reduced in the name of reality and situated at the extremity , the pathological pole , of a normative sequence : perception-image-memory-illusion ) . |
14 | But I really did like it at the end when he got back with his mother and the rest of the family and they had a lovely Christmas with hundreds of presents . |
15 | ‘ Even at school there were players more skilful than me , but I was the one who really wanted to do it in every game . |
16 | A sensible place to begin this endeavour is with the mainspring of the story 's action , the Ring ( here capitalised to distinguish it from the relatively insignificant stage-prop or ‘ Equalizer ’ of The Hobbit ) . |
17 | A further coat of filler is then applied , then feathered to blend it into the surrounding board |
18 | Bragg rubbed the tobacco lovingly between his palms , then began to feed it into the bowl of his pipe . |
19 | ‘ Oh well then , I suppose it is not mine , ’ said Lady Selvedge grudgingly pushing the pudding back towards the young man , who then proceeded to eat it in a kind of defiant confusion . |
20 | The previous type may then have become invalid , and coin users presumably had to replace it with the new one , a troublesome process , as the volume of some types ran into millions of coins . |
21 | But every time we came up with something we never seemed to get it beyond the initial idea , and then suddenly someone else would come out with it ! |
22 | He never did make it to the Academie , but being made international president of PEN , following Francis King , mattered a lot to him . |
23 | In fact I had it for six months and I never did plug it into an amplifier ; I just used it in the dressing room . ’ |