Example sentences of "[vb past] [prep] it the [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 But the shed at the side of the road had been unlocked , and when he peered into it the outline of the covered carriage he had been able to make out in the darkness promised adequate protection and a degree of comfort .
2 He drew from it the photograph of Elsie McAndrew that he had shown to Mrs Wilson in London .
3 If she even fried an egg , she directed upon it the beam of her concentration , almost praying it would not break .
4 Federal Treasurer Paul Keating retained his post and added to it the title of Deputy Prime Minister , thereby increasing speculation that he would succeed Hawke as Prime Minister [ see above ] .
5 To counteract that feeling , and while he propped her ‘ injured ’ foot on a stool and attended to her bruising , she opened her bag and extracted from it the envelope with Cara had handed over to her .
6 The months passed and there came a week when the purple flowers of the heather took over the moorland slopes and brought with it the sense at last of autumn , a time he loved .
7 It not only dared to enter the domain of philosophy by offering a critique of epistemology but also brought with it the heresy of relativism .
8 We conclude that heterogeneous chemistry on background aerosols was responsible for this conversion , which brought with it the potential for additional ozone loss in the autumn .
9 He opened the suitcase and took from it the carrier-bag with the Union Jack on it .
10 The policy they embraced was however anathema to many Conservatives , who rightly saw in it the beginning of the end of British rule in India .
11 It had about it the idealism of youth .
12 Even this gesture , a mercenary movement , had about it the lilt of broken syllables .
13 They further confused the tone of a piece that had about it the whiff of 1970s radical agitprop .
14 Also , in June 1940 the concept of airborne forces was , as far as the British Army was concerned , at its very inception and had about it the fearfulness of the unknown .
15 It would be a strange irony indeed if , as Europe left behind it the threat of nuclear war , that threat were found to be arising elsewhere in the world .
16 Here , it carried with it the notion of breaking down not only the school/community barrier but also the school/curriculum barrier by suggesting that parents might be directly involved in the education of their children by participating in classes .
17 If a cleric engaged in crime , it could be disputed whether a lay or an ecclesiastical court should try him ; if there was a dispute about marriage , which carried with it the inheritance of land and other corollaries , lay and Church courts would both be concerned in it .
18 The lighting of one hundred beacons , from Jersey to the Shetland Isles , the street parties and special events and the climactic procession by the Queen along a processional route lined by one million people waving Union Jacks under a murky grey sky — all of this implied an attempt to reclaim something permanent and enduring a sense of national pride — which had been systematically eroded by Britain 's loss of standing as a world power , and by some dark and mysterious incoming tide which carried with it the flotsam of unemployment , inflation , rising crime and social decay .
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