Example sentences of "[vb mod] [verb] it [adv] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 You may know it better as the Holding Company . ’
2 ( 66 ) … she must make it plain before the evening begins that some or all of the financial responsibility for it will be hers .
3 This must make it hard for the agencies who undertake to deliver telephone sales messages .
4 ‘ We must run it safely in the short term and long term , ’ he said , ‘ because if people are able to demonstrate that we are causing an environment problem we will be shut down . ’
5 Look at the implications looking back over it when when Fire and Public Protection had produced their report , but certainly the things are and it 's quite clear that we all know this case in my particular the river has been constricted by some thoroughly bad planning decisions and development control districts and they 're paying them that the owners are paying the penalty for that erm reducing the ditches and er building over them and okay we 've got problems erm so er there are structure plan implications erm which I do n't I think we should miss and if we say that really building on a is a principle well then we should try it right into the structure plan or looking at local plans for approval that we actually look at this a little bit more carefully .
6 It was a good thing to do , everyone should try it once in a while .
7 ‘ I must take it across to the eight twelves . ’
8 We must get it together in the four one-day internationals against India before we get to Sri Lanka .
9 And we should accept it also for the sake of our sinful world .
10 They may watch it knowingly as a piece of kitsch , but the point is that they are watching it .
11 The point I made to half , and now I 'll make it again to the whole , yesterday , was that it 's very important to , to define your roles in a particular thing .
12 when we send it back in a few days fitting , this job I says we 'll want it early in the morning and you can have it in the afternoon , but we were going to spend the day in Liverpool , but you 're dad said , I 'm not being round all those shops all day , so I said ooh no !
13 You might need it later in the same flight ; if it is n't there , you ca n't use it .
14 If you ca n't do it here you ca n't do it at the beginning of the second appointment , if you ca n't do it there then the chances are you 'll do it right at the end and if you have n't made the sale I guarantee you wo n't ask .
15 We 'll use it just as an exercise again .
16 The very concept of liberation makes sense only if it is viewed against the backdrop of unjust oppression , and while the notion of unjust oppression no doubt assumes many guises , it is incomprehensible to me how we might understand it apart from the idea of the violation of basic moral rights .
17 And seeing these two women coming down through the path towards the city the people of Bethlehem , yo you 'll read it there in the opening of chapter two in the book of Ruth , the people of Bethlehem , they left their fields and came running to greet them !
18 see that 's gon na , see what I mean , as we go along that 'll fall on the floor that , you 'll have it all over the place , put it away okay , get some petrol now on the way
19 It 's sticky so I 'll er , I 'll leave it here at the moment .
20 ‘ I 'll put it here by the chair so we do n't forget . ’
21 Right I think so , I 'll check it again in a minute just to make sure .
22 We 'll offer it tomorrow on the on the on the show .
23 ‘ Yes , we 'll find it there in a battered casket . ’
24 people latched onto it as something that was n't a political strike , was n't being led by militants , revolutionaries , what have you , and it was something , it was just for the freedom of the working man if you like , and his standard of living was not gon na suffer because of bosses intransig intransigence I 'll say it right in a while , and what have you .
25 Miraculously , she could make it sound like a tiny tiny ‘ m ’ .
26 Pull it in to the small boat , lay it on a box and then we 'd pull the chain in by hand and then we 'd rerun it further up the river .
27 Those taking up headland set-aside could site it either against a footpath , or right away from areas where members of the public were likely to go .
28 I 'd do it again like a shot ’ .
29 ‘ If it were summer I 'd do it even wi' the children .
30 I was happy in my Office ; it was exacting but I could carry it easily in the House of Lords ; and I had no wish to re-submit myself to the rough and tumble of electioneering and the House of Commons …
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