Example sentences of "[adv] [vb -s] it [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Instead Arnold smashes it out of that frightening rough , and not only gets it past the cross-bunkers but lands it pin high just on the edge of the green .
2 The main accusation levelled against boundary routing is that the technology does not actually decrease overall complexity of the network , it merely shifts it from the periphery to the central hub .
3 Even forgetting the fact that the Cobra was the fastest accelerating car you could buy at the time , that only puts it between the £21,620 Elan SE and the entry level £26,400 Excel SE , close to the £22,363 Morgan plus eight and even closer to the £23,526 Toyota Supra Turbo .
4 The depth of the recession facing Germany means that the boom must fall soon , and then about the only way for Siemens to save the company will be to make a major acquisition that finally puts it onto the world stage .
5 This is then forgotten or repressed when it seems to have vanished altogether and there 's a third period , what Freud calls the return of the repressed when the initial trauma comes back in the form of symptoms and er ideally in the form of an analysis that finally brings it to the surface of consciousness and dissolves it , and this is a typical pattern .
6 You just , I just leaves it on the side .
7 For the subject does not understand history according to its scientific formulation , but undergoes the process of inter-pellation at the level of ideology , and thus experiences it through the formulas of historicism .
8 Below it flows the Dorn , known to the Saxons as the Milk , from the cloudiness of its water after rain : and one still sees it as the Saxons saw it a thousand years ago , as I saw it a few minutes ago in the thin rain drifting down from the Cotswolds .
9 As the droplet leaves the jet it is held in position by an electric field which further propels it towards the paper .
10 And this would explain a further problem affecting the order of things in the quarto : this song comes between the Dialogue of Coridon and Mopsa — the Haymakers ' scene — and the Dance of Haymakers which directly follows it in the score and belongs to it musically in every way : both are in G major and a quick 6/4 , and share the same bucolic atmosphere as well as their thematic material , whereas ‘ When I have often heard young maids complaining ’ is a sophisticated song in C major and stately triple time .
11 She always cooks it in the plastic bag though
12 Then it means that a person , as the result of observing that whenever , say , a table is hit , he suffers pain , when now he is in pain , automatically associates it with the table .
13 It is even sophisticated enough to perform spot and process colour separations to a PostScript printer — a feature that also separates it from the majority of budget drawing packages .
14 It also rescues it from the criticisms of positivist psychologists and behaviourists .
15 This is used mainly for business but Fred also uses it in the evenings and at weekends for the family .
16 She also cuts it with the kitchen scissors !
17 And a and also , I mean , it was , and it was a Panasonic one this , erm what you do , if you were doing a jacket top potato , you er would weigh the potato and , and then erm put in the weight , say it was six ounces , and all you do then is press erm jacket potato , you do n't have to put any time , it automatically does it for the time .
18 If an insect walks by , she grabs it and instantly drags it inside the tunnel .
19 Just as I 'm wondering if I have time to nip across to silence it , there 's a burst of shouting that nearly jolts it off the table .
20 Feminist criticism , like Marxist , is avowedly evaluative , which sharply distinguishes it from the generality of current academic criticism , of whatever school .
21 If a doctor offers a risky and as yet scientifically unproved treatment the GMC surely owes it to the public either to stop the doctor offering that treatment ( outside scientifically valid trials ) or to stop the doctor practising at all .
22 He then takes it to the bank and gets the money , to spend as he chooses .
23 There is in these travel journals a movement towards the recognition that the most acute form of nostalgia is that which , in evoking the past as lost fullness , then faces it with the knowledge that the restless incompleteness felt so acutely now , in the present , was also a part of the imaginary fullness then ; the truthfulness which aims to allay nostalgia only intensifies it .
24 The buyer is now the drawee/acceptor of the bill , who then returns it to the seller .
25 As far as the banks are concerned , they have no change in their balances in the Bank of England ( the government spends less money but then returns it to the banks by buying bills ) , but banks have fewer bills and hence fewer liquid assets .
26 He then sucks it into the hollow first joint of a special limb , the pedipalp , rather in the same way as one fills a fountain pen .
27 The island is claimed by Comoros , which officially represents it at the UN .
28 The caveman does not need to think or use blood in digestive processes , but instead needs it in the arms and legs for running and fighting .
29 Instead , the Paris-Brussels axis firmly rejects it in the name of ‘ humanism ’ .
30 A smith uses a hammer very differently to most tradesmen , never holds it at the bottom of the shaft , for the resulting whip means that power is lost so they always clench the tool near the head .
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