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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Of course , the label or promotional literature as constituting a representation would have to induce the representee to enter the main contract of sale and he would have to know of it prior to the contract .
2 What does the learner make of it all ?
3 What do the waiters make of it all ?
4 I suppose what I was asked and what I said in reply will be subject to the ‘ 30 year rule ’ — and heaven knows what any archivist will make of it all in the year 2012 !
5 ‘ I wonder what St Wilfrid would make of it all ’ , wrote the 1984 committee chairman in the feast programme .
6 WHAT would Amos Brearly make of it all ?
7 ‘ What d' you make of it all ? ’
8 " What on earth do you make of it all ? "
9 What do investors think of it all ?
10 Could n't think of it all night but now I have , just by talking about it .
11 He was much more concerned with what the critics would think of it all .
12 The real key question of course was what did Jack think of it all .
13 I do n't think of it that way .
14 The apple as symbol is all around us but most of us would still think of it first as a tasty snack .
15 Life is all right — it is what people make of it that is the problem . ’
16 What would Dixie Dean and Tommy Lawton make of it all ?
17 It was an affliction rather than a gift , and I was to be healed of it two years later by what I believe was the power of Christ .
18 He does n't often speak of it these days , but — ’
19 Waiting to see what he had made of it all .
20 Their underlying feeling is that Frank Williams has blundered badly and they are saying : ‘ What a mess he has made of it all ! ’
21 John Stuart Mill notices this ( he quotes the sentence in question , italicising ‘ and of individual qualities ’ ) , and proceeds ( 1 ) to ask what is meant by an ‘ individual quality ’ ; ( 2 ) as if he knows the answer to this question ( namely , the individual qualities of an object are ‘ the individual and instantaneous impressions which it produces in us ’ ) , to deny that predicating a quality of an object is predicating of it one of its individual qualities ; and ( 3 ) to say what it is to predicate a quality of an object ( namely , ‘ to assert that the object affects us in a manner similar to that in which we are affected by a known class of objects ’ ) .
22 " Well , " the McLaren girl said , " I guess the whole thing was kind of a bother , but I had n't thought of it that way .
23 Well I 've never thought of it that way .
24 When it launched a complete make-up range last autumn , it introduced ‘ Mirror Image Consultation ’ , a new way of selling which is so simple that all the other companies were left wondering why they had n't thought of it first .
25 I would have thought of it given time .
26 She could see he had not thought of it this way .
27 ‘ Do you want us to get rid of it all for you ? ’ the man asked .
28 Number seven loads and loads and loads and loads of this moist toilet tissue cos we 're trying to get rid of it all so you 've got the lot .
29 Just , you 've got ta go on that , and she presses it and the chart thing which is press that one and it 'll get rid of it all .
30 to put to , if we 're getting a trailer and getting rid of it all .
  Next page