Example sentences of "as it [vb past] [art] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Every now and then a jack pike would rupture the tranquillity as it marauded the easy pickings .
2 The Working Men 's College says today , as it said a hundred years ago : ‘ We seek no greater good than education ; we scorn to justify it save by itself . ’
3 The machine was not really a steam engine as it had no moving parts .
4 This was not true , but in a largely illiterate society the snowball effect of malicious rumours worried the Bolsheviks , as it had the Tsarist officials before them .
5 Jay sat on the white balcony , shaded from a Mediterranean sun burning off white walls , sparking off a turquoise sea where the bright sails of a skiff were silk balloons shot with dazzle , sparkles of pure light bursting behind the boat as it skimmed the perfect waters .
6 He hugged himself against the sudden freezing wind then scrambled to his feet as it whipped the first drops of rain through the open door .
7 Up to the late 1950s this inflow of dollars was generally welcome as it relieved the earlier shortages .
8 Leonora gripped a rail with white-knuckled hands when the boat bucked as it met the wilder waters of the sound .
9 Later in the week , some of us went for an evening swim at a nearby beach — or rather not so nearby , as it entailed a few miles of driving and then a long walk down a deserted track .
10 In such a case , Lawson J held that the sale was a consumer sale so that the exclusion clause was void insofar as it excluded the implied conditions under the SGA 1979 .
11 First , it failed because it did not benefit the poor as much as it did the middle classes .
12 Arguably , this public proclamation of secretarian communist beliefs during the election campaign , alerting as it did the bourgeois authorities to the subversive political activities of this " Red Messiah " , and resulting in Nizan 's transfer to Auch , precipitated his decision to become a fully integrated member of the PCF .
13 Victor was known within Celtic language studies as the author of a seminal book whose title , The Decline of the Celtic Languages ( John Donald , Edinburgh , 1983 ) , disguised the richness of its scope , just as it disguised the alternative interests of the author .
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