Example sentences of "[adv] it [verb] [adj] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Naturally it has different applications in different contexts .
2 The suggestion of Trotter ( 1949 ) that the whole of the South Wales coalfield was underlain by a regional thrust plane , probably represented at surface by the Careg Cennen disturbance , was scornfully rejected by O. T. Jones and others in one of the Geological Society 's historic controversies , but perhaps it deserves critical reconsideration in the light of recent ideas about deep crustal detachment zones .
3 Perhaps it has more force against emotivism than against the attitudinism I have described .
4 Cleo Huggins made a tree that had another little notch on top , so it had this kind of Arabic feel .
5 So it produces usable power for an electric generator , without any input .
6 The subterranean passage view offers a plausible account of how the monsters could feed , but unfortunately in doing so it destroys another theory about ‘ Nessie ’ , which is that the animal is a relic of the dinosaur age , possibly a plesiosaur .
7 So it stayed 70 years on the floor .
8 Because i i they though it was in competition with other varieties around and it something t It was n't necessarily to do with the fact that erm they though it was less it held less prestige in the community .
9 None the less it makes two features of long-term insurance policies very clear .
10 Nevertheless it took many centuries for Edinburgh to become unequivocally the royal and national capital .
11 Nevertheless it raises some questions about the ‘ completeness ’ here attained , and the light in which we 're asked to approach the music .
12 Nevertheless it contains two clues for ways to improve things .
13 Another way of putting it is that even though the academic community is founded on a culture of critical discourse ( see Chapter 7 ) , normally it gives little thought to the criteria by which its critical judgements come into play .
14 Thus it involves massive amounts of reporting , in person or on paper , to keep everyone up to date :
15 Well anyway it gets half way through this wood I could n't see couple of yards in front of me
16 Yesterday it added another country to its list with an order to produce nearly 5m passports for Lithuania .
17 Probably it originated many times by independent ‘ mutation ’ .
18 The transnational capitalist class is a bridge between the nation-state and the global system and the more assiduously it brings transnational practices into what were once the realm of the regional or the national , then the more faithfully it serves the interests of the system .
19 Now it charges one part of the city $12 a ton and still loses money .
20 Now it took several years for er the new incentive scheme to be introduced throughout the whole of the works and I think during my last discussion you know , I did indicate that the fitters for example , you know , were about the last group to go on .
21 Manchester at first lost out very badly on rail investment , but now it has some compensation in the Windsor Link and is going ahead with an advanced tram system that will take over a number of heavy rail routes .
22 Its chief virtue lies in its medicinal qualities which were thought considerable ; even now it has some use in the treatment of ailments .
23 Given its origins , the NUR saw itself as an industrial union ; originally it organized most groups of BR workers , and it continues to be recognized by BR as representing all grades of staff other than management .
24 erm , my Lord , in relation to that erm and er is an example , the European court itself and only the European court has the power to limit the direct effect of the provision , they can say well it has direct effect in these circumstances prospectively , but not retroactively and only the European court , that court alone has that power , all other courts , national courts must , my Lord this is your duty under article five I would submit to enforce article eighty five and three F
25 Erm well it happened some time between about two and six
26 Two hundred years ago it took five days for news to get from Paris to Strasbourg .
27 And not surprisingly it gets booked well in advance for Cowes Week .
28 Paradoxically it provides this sense of freedom to choose , but the process of play activity is about limiting the choices .
29 Such an approach is not at all for the sake of establishing some banal historical continuity , or of demonstrating a universal homogeneity of narrative ; rather it allows precise tracings of specific historical shifts and distinct orderings of narrative and the novelistic , generic responses to historical , technological and social re-orderings .
30 For the first time the Bill gives galleries powers of disposal , subject to certain conditions — or rather it gives such powers to the Tate and the national portrait gallery , but not to the Wallace collection or the national gallery .
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