Example sentences of "if it [verb] a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 A new drug could become a potential blockbuster if it treated a common ailment and generated $100m-plus in annual sales ( see table ) .
2 Its leaders knew there was a serious risk of trouble if it took a mass march into Gqozo 's lair .
3 Fortunately , one or two civil servants realise that the government could build up trouble if it allows a whole generation to grow up with a dislike for nuclear weapons .
4 She screwed up her face at the name as if it left a nasty taste in her mouth , adding : ‘ Ca n't abide that man .
5 The Whitbread brewing group was ruffled by stories it would be forced , under US legislation , to sell its US drink importing operations if it continued a trans-Atlantic restaurant build-up .
6 Adams ' report , one of a long line of studies , expert groups , advisory committees and internal and external task forces that have looked at Super-SARA , declared that the project was still viable if it got an immediate go-ahead .
7 She cut another cross , wondering vaguely if it had a religious significance .
8 It 'd be really awkward having a name like that if it had a short neck . ’
9 For the present , in the daytime , he was abruptly fed up with the lot : himself , his insufficiency , the toll that his financial state seemed to be taking of his wife , and the colossally polite head of his stepson , hanging over him now as if it had a miniature keg of brandy around its neck .
10 There was something funny about it , as if it had a deliberate mistake you were supposed to spot or something .
11 It achieved this , he noted , by pretending to be injured , dragging itself along the ground as if it had a broken wing .
12 Yeah but this this this dog will only drink it if it had a little bit of lemonade in .
13 If it becomes a major instrument for redistribution of income then it is involved in the political arguments over equality and social justice as well as in meeting basic need .
14 There is little agreement on the ethics of recording without permission in situations like these , but Labov 's general principle seems to offer a sensible guideline ; it is that the researcher should ‘ avoid any act that would be embarrassing to explain if it became a public issue ’ ( Labov 1981 : 33 ) .
15 BRITAIN could face a decade of high unemployment if it became a full member of the European Monetary System without a sharp fall in the pound , according to a pressure group , the Campaign for Work .
16 BRITAIN could face a decade of high unemployment if it became a full member of the European Monetary System without a sharp fall in the pound , according to a pressure group , the Campaign for Work .
17 Until 1989 the courts had said that a 'speaking " decision could be upset if it contained an obvious error .
18 In May a former deputy director of the US Arms Control and Disarmament Agency said that the USA would be violating the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile ( ABM ) Treaty if it deployed a newly-tested missile tracking device as part of its " Star Wars " defence system .
19 If the property does not sell at all , or if it takes a long time to sell , the local authority search result may become dated .
20 If it involves a specific effect , like graduated colours or 3D , it 's better to pay for the features than to come up with a make-do solution .
21 Pentrite can explode without a detonator if it receives a severe blow or strong friction .
22 Coaxing is another and sycophancy is another — you put your own interpretation on it but if it gets a good show , then it 's all a matter of semantics .
23 If it gets a bad reputation , people wo n't come and they will suffer .
24 A theory is a good theory if it is an elegant model , if it describes a wide class of observations , and if it predicts the results of new observations .
25 But the OFT could outlaw the plan if it uncovers a back-door deal between the banks to penalise customers who stay in the black .
26 If it chooses an independent valuer , then there is a separate contract between the valuer and the borrower , the society 's obligation being confined to using care in the selection of the valuer .
27 That is , a question involving calculation was deemed to be practical only if it involved a real-life situation .
28 The emancipators thought a commune could serve administrative and judicial purposes only if it embraced a coherent area of peasant settlement .
29 It was held that ‘ an act of the parties or … an act of the courts ’ was necessary to revoke consent , and it was suggested that an agreement to separate , particularly if it included a non-molestation clause , would suffice .
30 It 's not a sum you 'd throw away ; but you 'd be happy if it bought a new handbag , a train fare to London or a tankful of petrol .
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