Example sentences of "it [vb -s] [conj] [det] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Thus for Schrödinger 's cat there is one world in which it lives and another world in which it dies .
2 First , it allows that many kinds of circumstances can contribute to the course of events , and secondly it enables us to understand how these may combine to bring about dramatic and unexpected social changes which Althusser calls ‘ ruptures ’ .
3 ( 4 ) It happens that many systems of equations , particularly those of some physical relevance , have simple behaviour for extreme values of a parameter .
4 and I second agenda and erm we ask for your attention to para three point four er which is the financial part of this budget really and it says that some contingencies in nursery schools should be increased , erm that it is actually allowed for in the later budget erm the tax payer budget will be .
5 This is not a useful approach , because it assumes that all forms of intelligence are of the same qualitative type .
6 The major criticism of this approach is that it assumes that all information about the organisation is kept in documents .
7 On the basis of her understanding , it appears that any artist in the USA who uses the conventions of the mass media in such a way as to produce a critique of the media ( and I can think of a good many ) is veritably a ‘ quasi-situationist ’ .
8 Section 10 of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986 and s.213 of the Insolvency Act 1986 together provide that if in the course of winding up it appears that any business of the company has been carried on with intent to defraud creditors of the company or other persons , or for any fraudulent purpose , the liquidator may apply to the court for a declaration that any persons who were knowingly parties to such fraudulent trading are liable to make such contributions to the company 's assets as the court thinks proper .
9 Since the mid-1980s when the satanic child abuse scare first came to Britain , it seems that many workers within Social Services in particular have been influenced by this thinking .
10 It seems that many people within BBC Scotland view the post-April reality as likely to be more restrictive than liberating .
11 JUST when you may been ready to despair , it seems that this country of ours may have found something of its heart , or perhaps its soul .
12 It 's the Independence Day celebrations in the United States next Monday , and , from what Liz said , it seems that most people in America are making it a long holiday weekend . ’
13 It seems that most designers of fibreglass pools are not water gardeners , for the shelves are often narrow and curved making it difficult to accommodate a traditional square planting basket .
14 It seems that another Lance-Corporal from the Stores Platoon , responsible for running the Force laundry contract , somehow managed to get all his personal laundry starched and pressed .
15 Thirdly , it seems that both groups of critics would want to see greater support given to natural families , in general , to help them to care for their children more effectively and to prevent the need for substitute care arising .
16 It seems that some designers of upright cookers think they can get away with dowdy styling and primitive features .
17 For as well as suggesting that if we were to give up the view that most actions are autonomous we should have to give up a great deal else as well , it asserts that this transformation of our attitudes is actually beyond us .
18 It follows that each element of Q[x] has infinitely many associates .
19 If value consensus is an essential component of all societies , then it follows that some form of stratification will result from the ranking of individuals in terms of common values .
20 It follows that these transformations on their own can not be used to generate genuinely non-colinear solutions from colinear ones .
21 It follows that any increase in the militancy of trade unions which intensifies the competition between them will also tend to raise the rate of inflation .
22 It follows that any increase in trade union militancy , which reflects an intensification of the class struggle , may lead to an increase in the rate of inflation .
23 It follows that any work with children may and very probably will have sexual implications .
24 It follows that any proposal for a use with potential odour emission problems could not be classed as ‘ light industrial ’ and might therefore be refused planning permission on the grounds of conflict with the local plan .
25 It follows that any proposal for change would be referred to customary ways of thinking , and this provides for the possibility of operational techniques which realize new ideas being devised as an extension of existing practices .
26 From their views on the intentional and affective fallacies ( Brooks seems to have agreed entirely with Wimsatt and Beardsley about these ) it follows that this reconciliation of opposites must be seen not as an event in the mind of the author or reader , but as an objective fact about the text 's meaning or structure .
27 It follows that this quest for reassurance will cause her to seek out situations in which some sort of official sanction will be given to her change .
28 It means that this type of analysis lights upon a particular aspect of social life and social change ( and an aspect of life with which Chicagoans were immediately concerned in the 1920s ) without attending to what Castells or a structuralist Marxist would see as the principal underlying processes affecting people 's lives , especially economic processes and those related to the social relations of production .
29 It means that any slackening of energy will lead to a rapid slow-down .
30 The code applies to ships carrying oil or any hazardous cargo in bulk , and it recommends that all tankers of more than 5000 tonnes are provided with electronic and satellite navigation equipment .
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