Example sentences of "it [vb -s] [adv prt] [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ … originally the ego includes everything , later it separates off an external world from itself ’ .
2 It insists that this is therefore the best guide to what they should do , that it points out the right direction for continuing and developing that practice .
3 If it goes down a thirty hole , it 'll be sixty wo n't it cos it 's double score .
4 oh just shoving sheets of plate into a , a machine that comes down and it take , it goes out the other end and you put another one in all day long
5 She paused , then added , ‘ It goes back a long way . ’
6 Everyone knows that , it goes back a long way .
7 I said , well , I , there must be summat there , out there , she said no , he said , she said it goes back a long time .
8 Press the switch on the fascia and it lights up a new world of controlled cooking .
9 You let them play against one another and sometimes you transfer a player from one club to another , so that it builds up a mutual admiration society .
10 Well I must say I much prefer it like that cos it covers up the ugly fence .
11 Filigree Street crosses its turnwise end in the manner of the crosspiece of a T , and the Broken Drum is so placed that it looks down the full length of the street .
12 The route this year will once again start from Bournemouth Pier , run along the promenade up to Hengistbury Head , before leaving the line of the sea as it heads up the scenic cliff tops and down to Boscombe Pier .
13 At the instant of applying the excess rudder , it speeds up the outer wing-tip , creating more lift there , and gives the inner wing ‘ sweep back ’ in relation to the airflow , thus increasing the tendency to tip stall on that wing while reducing it on the other .
14 It huddles round a flint-towered church and sprawls down to the North Sea — and what a wallop the sea makes as it pounds at the shingle . "
15 In the Soviet view it marks off an entire millennium of ‘ feudalism ’ from the capitalist phase which it inaugurated .
16 ‘ I think it has something to do with the word counselling ; people seem afraid of it — maybe it conjures up the wrong image — that they feel they 've failed in some way if they have to resort to counselling .
17 It conjures up the bad image about opiates on a general scale , y'know .
18 For instance it clears up a tiresome controversy over the level at which natural selection acts .
19 It revolves around a selected sample of detailed case-studies that are located in their sectoral context drawing on statistical and large scale survey data .
20 Clearly it takes on a further significance in the context of the discussion in this paper .
21 The famous Chapter 5 of the first book , which deals with the transformation of labour from a stage where it is a ‘ part of life ’ to a stage under capitalism when it takes on the imaginary form of a thing separate from the labourer , when it can be bought and sold , is worked out in Formen , in the discussion of tribal , oriental , and ancient societies which it contains .
22 Obviously , when sport offers itself as one of the few accessible routes away from deprivation , as it was to the early slaves , it takes on an attractive quality .
23 Instead it takes up the double aspect , Januslike posture of any interpretation .
24 It takes out a blue tag printed with the words ‘ Staff in confidence ’ and sticks it into the space on the label .
25 Such a widening of perspectives obviously leaves no place for the by now out-dated claim concerning the objective nature of linguistic analysis , but it opens up a whole range of stimulating opportunities for the exploration of the ways texts function in society .
26 Watch out for them when you buy it and it opens up a whole world of experimenting .
27 It lies below and beyond the distinctions between subject and object which are inbuilt in ordinary experience at the level of knowledge and action ; so it opens up a direct awareness of the God on whom our existence hangs as given in and with our deepest awareness of ourselves .
28 ‘ We are very pleased about this as it opens up the entire country music market for us .
29 This test factor is said to interpret the relationship between the two variables ; it opens up the black box to show how the effect occurs .
30 First , that ‘ the search for the affluent reader ’ distorts the make-up and content of the British press and , second , that the ‘ patronage ’ of advertisers favours some ( the middle class ) and not other ( the working class ) types of readers — it freezes out the working class reader and the working class newspaper .
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