Example sentences of "it [verb] [conj] [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | How it operated provided an intriguing study to which much detailed work was devoted . |
2 | In 1972 it expected that the new system of fewer and larger local authorities would prove more efficient . |
3 | It postulates that the actual rate of inflation which prevails at any moment in time may be decomposed into two constituent parts : ( a ) an expectational component , measured by the variable , ( b ) an excess demand component , measured , as in the Phillips-Lipsey model , by the magnitude of f(U) . |
4 | To this end it announced that the electoral commission was to be reconstituted in order to free it from political influence and manipulation . |
5 | The High Court in Dublin sparked a huge controversy on Feb. 17 when it ruled that a 14-year-old girl , who became pregnant after allegedly being raped by the father of a friend , could not travel to the United Kingdom for an abortion . |
6 | It recommended that every possible assistance and encouragement should be given to the railway in pursuit of its aim . |
7 | It recommended that the second stage of the process towards EMU , as envisaged in the 1989 Delors plan [ see p. 36598 ] , should begin on Jan. 1 , 1993 , and should be as short as possible . |
8 | It recommended that the preliminary hearing be abolished , that the district judge be required to conduct the hearing on an interventionist basis , that he or she be required to give reasons for a decision and explain the rules of law and that specific guidance should be provided on the expenses recoverable for small claims . |
9 | It thinks that a sensible way would be to standardise on windows , icons , menus , and command box style via agreement on specific languages — such as C , C++ — for all interfaces , with reusable source code modules , rather than on specific product-oriented solutions . |
10 | There are two different ways in which the existence of an alternative remedy can affect the availability of judicial remedies : it might entirely preclude the award of a judicial remedy , or it might give the court a discretion to refuse a ( discretionary ) remedy if it thinks that the alternative remedy is adequate . |
11 | But the Committee do not have to agree to this if it thinks that the new information is not important . |
12 | Not till later was it diagnosed that the mental breakdown which destroyed Hoskyns crept upon him for a year or more before he died . |
13 | It presumed that the particular classroom layouts and patterns of organization commended would promote children 's learning more effectively than any others . |
14 | Tragedy involves the past , and it arose when the Greek awareness of time was becoming clearer and stronger . |
15 | It maintained that no new code for the assessment of compensation or the collection of betterment would be adequate if this individualistic system remained . |
16 | Hailing the decision as a major breakthrough , campaigners say it signifies that the tuna-dolphin issue is being taken seriously by British industry and will lead to other negotiations between industry and environmentalists . |
17 | The day after Marlene Dietrich 's death , it reported that the legendary actress ‘ had German , French , British and American newspapers delivered each morning , and devoured them while drinking Fortnum 's Prince of Wales tea ’ . |
18 | ‘ But such anxiety will not stop it happening if the Soviet Union should ever allow it to happen or be unable to stop it happening ’ . |
19 | A great late run by Chats saw it fizzle as the winning post came too soon for them , victory went to the in form Likely Lads team of Patsy McGee , Kieran Ferry , Eamon Devlin , Frank Ferry , Daniel O'Connell and Brian Deehan . |
20 | It concludes that the red squirrel is in decline because it is far less efficient at using woodland food than its rival — the North American grey squirrel . |
21 | The use of words and symbols to influence other people in predictable ways requires that the child must be able to represent mentally the relationship between the symbol ( word or gesture ) , the meaning for which it stands and the intended effect on the other person . |
22 | It illustrates that the main bulwark thrown up by the United Kingdom constitution against oppressive laws is not that Parliament is rendered unable to pass them , but that democratic procedures , principled administration and measure of common sense are accommodated within it . |
23 | The wall is not as steep as it looks and a pleasing sequence of stretches and foot-changes , made all the more enjoyable by more excellent protection , leads to a stopping place just short of the arête . |
24 | But it looks like the next generation is here . |
25 | It found that the small South Island-based tribe had an exclusive right to fish virtually all of the South Island coastline , as well as the right to a reasonable share of the country 's 200-mile deep-water fishing zone . |
26 | And it found that the Daily Star advert had no effect whatsoever on record sales . |
27 | We will return to this foundation of church life in a later chapter , but it starts as the new team assembles , absolutely united in one goal , namely to win the lost and build a new church together . |
28 | It emphasises that a proposed change of use constitutes development if the new use is ‘ substantially ’ different from the old . |
29 | It transpired that a large quantity of spent shells from a plane ahead went through the nose and had struck Ed . |
30 | It transpired that the whole street had been summoned to hear the declaration . |