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

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1 Nevertheless it seems likely that change was forced on him , as earlier on such ‘ empirical ’ despots as Peter I in Russia and Frederick William I in Prussia , by the need for greater practical efficiency , and to some extent perhaps by an instinctive feeling for rationality , not by theories propounded in Paris .
2 Soon it became clear that Sarah was seriously ill with rheumatic fever and would not be able to work for some time , and another girl , Hetty , was engaged temporarily .
3 Thus it becomes clear that Representation is fraud ’ ( chapter I , ‘ Parliaments ’ ) .
4 Thus it became certain that Rennenkampf could not , for at least two , possibly three , days , come to Samsonov 's aid and that the entire German Eastern Group could , therefore , assail Samsonov 's right wing with impunity .
5 Thus it seems likely that examination questions in chemical engineering at degree level will bear certain similarities of form and content , and share certain presuppositions , in institutions throughout the world .
6 Thus it seems likely that health authorities were encouraged to be generous in the allocation of budgets , that fundholders were less concerned than they might otherwise have been about the need to stay within strict cash limits , and that non-fundholders were allowed greater freedom of referral than might have been anticipated .
7 Already it seems clear that superantigens are yet another example of microbial pathogens evolving mechanisms to use and subvert the immune response ; we shall hear more of their role in infective and autoimmune disease .
8 Clearly that justification collapsed once it became clear that shareholders in large public companies no longer exercised any real control or responsibility over their property .
9 Even now it seemed incredible that Mark — cynical , idle , sophisticated Mark , had actually joined that file of Catholic students who , during Holy Week , carried a heavy wooden Cross through the public streets and along the open road between London and Our Lady 's shrine at Walsingham .
10 Well this I think 's Well it smells better than camomile tea .
11 But the whole thrust of the poem militates against serious meditation here on the transient and subverted joys of human sexual liberty ; rather it identifies those as facts for us to note and to submerge within the same sardonic amusement at human folly that Margery , in particular , seems to invite .
12 Then it becomes clear that politicians , for example , can be involved in processes of policy-making , implementation , evaluation and adjudication .
13 Very little is known about what triggers most animal viruses to follow either path ; indeed it seems possible that integration is a random and accidental process that does not occur at any specific sites on the chromosomes .
14 Yet it remains true that Julian 's experience can be fruitfully compared to that of the prophets of Israel , for example , or to that of Muhammad , the prophet of Islam .
15 Yet it seems clear that Eisenhower acted only when he was convinced that delay or vacillation might prove even more dangerous .
16 Yet it seems likely that resources would actually be better used in other prevention programmes .
17 Again and again it became apparent that politics had not brought most of these youngsters to the YCs .
18 Certainly it seems likely that women will find themselves ever more firmly trapped at the bottom of the office hierarchy as a result of the introduction of information technology .
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