Example sentences of "[adv] it [vb mod] [verb] [prep] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | The regional nomarch , or prefect , tells each local office how much it ought to collect in the year ( the national total being what the government reckons the budget needs ) . |
2 | The Danish government also claims that however much it may disagree with the grynd , it is unable to interfere in the domestic matters of the Faroe Islands . |
3 | Others besides the agency girl must have seen them leaving together ; she wondered how long it would take for the news to reach Pete . |
4 | Teachers and librarians need to know how long it will take for the teacher or librarian and pupils to learn how to use the program . |
5 | Perhaps it should come as no surprise then that his approach to the Eighth Symphony has broadened and mellowed over the years , losing in the process much of its Russian accent and instead seeking out more refined , more purely musical nuances . |
6 | Perhaps it should come as no surprise that a sister product to the established First Word Plus should rate so highly , both were developed by GST , when you consider that word processing under a graphical environment such as GEM is almost the same as simple desktop publishing . |
7 | Perhaps it will come as no surprise to my readers to hear not only that all knowledge of selling me a coffin was denied but even that they were now , or ever had been , coffin-manufacturers . |
8 | Obviously it would depend on the issue , I mean , I 'm , I 'm trying to sort of help here . |
9 | ‘ If only it could happen in the North-East . ’ |
10 | Get the roller and roll it on there so it 'll dissolve off the ink . |
11 | That bags quite old so it 'll smell like a lot of things , it 'll smell like school friends even Mum ? |
12 | and you can set it so it 'll backup save every minute or every hour |
13 | So it 'll come in a close second . |
14 | Education is being pushed more towards being an instrument of national policy , or so it would appear to an outsider . |
15 | The sun was getting low over the sea and in an hour or so it would dip below the horizon , where there were horizontal bars of dark colour . |
16 | So it would work with a square . |
17 | So it must fall within the remain you know eight districts figures . |
18 | So it 'd go from the , from the battery |
19 | So it should rank as a ‘ standard ’ brew . |
20 | So it should come to a little bit more than that one , should n't it ? |
21 | So it should come at the same |
22 | So it should come as no surprise that we can teach children to manipulate this theatrical language by the same variety of means as we can teach other aspects of drama ; using the whole gamut of strategies ( working in role or out of role , with small or large groups , using forum theatre , still images , games and exercises ) . |
23 | so it could go on a separate tape if you wanted that to happen , it 's on a Mazda tape |
24 | The auxiliary use of need has also been found in the following type of sentence not listed by Jacobsson : ( 23 ) By co-vary , we mean that the more a language has of one of the processes , the less it need have of the other . |
25 | Henceforth it would revert to an elected emperorship . |
26 | Nevertheless it can come as a shock to a trained accountant to discover that 21 billion of net expenditure is accounted for in this way : no assets ; no liabilities , just an excess of payments over receipts of 20 ; 8 billion compared with a budgeted excess of 20.6 billion . |
27 | Soon it would reappear behind the pipe , with footmarks on it . |
28 | Adventure might seem exciting , but all too soon it could seem like a prison sentence , especially when it meant living aboard a ship with all manner of rogues and scoundrels . |
29 | Nonetheless , I keep my game in shape and hopefully it will work in the All-Ireland finals , ’ added Colm . |
30 | Erm well in in the context of what I did say yesterday it 'll come as no great surprise to anyone that like Ryedale we also accept the North Yorkshire County County figures , erm which in short we we find are based on reasonable assumptions and and and an appropriate methodology , compared to some of the more extreme interpretations and projections that have that have been put forward , if I can illustrate that point by reference to er potential building rates , that the highest figure that 's been suggested is the one put forward by Mr Grigson , of Barton Willmore , I 'm talking for the moment about Greater York generally , and I 'll come onto the Selby aspect in a minute . |