Example sentences of "it [adv] [vb -s] [adv prt] to the " in BNC.
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1 | erm But it basically comes down to the attitude that people have , if the government was , or whoever owns the forest , private ownership , or whatever , controls what the loggers do , I mean it 's their forest it 's up to them to control what the loggers do and do n't do , and whether they let cultivators in or they do n't let cultivators in . |
2 | it just goes on to the edge here . |
3 | On every channel earnest-looking men with maps and pointers , looking like war-gamers in some fiendish Pentagon basement , demonstrate — predict , even — the inch-by-inch path that the storm is taking , noting that it usually passes off to the north , but may perhaps curve back upon itself and go in for a second strike . |
4 | If the poem goes back to the origins of religion , it also goes back to the origins of society and language . |
5 | Nor does the book confine itself to a run-down of the different massage strokes ; it also ventures in to the territory of relaxation tips , body awareness exercises and meditation techniques to instill a sense of calm . |
6 | But it also harks back to the leadership campaign , when this noted intellectual was reported as saying some unkind things about the cerebral quality of one candidate , a Mr John Major , who heard the reports . |
7 | It probably dates back to The Beatles when Richard Starkey became Ringo the millionaire and Pete Best kept his real name and ended up as a civil servant . |
8 | It really boils down to the question of intent . |
9 | ‘ If it simply goes back to the parliament 's corridors , lots of hard work will be wasted . ’ |
10 | It then goes on to the Shoulder of Mutton Hill , noted for its flower rich grassland . |
11 | It then goes on to the village of Colton and the Trent Valley . |
12 | Possibly well no , cos they , because it then goes on to the rain in heaven , I was going to say , maybe send the rain |
13 | In places it almost comes down to the ground . ’ |