Example sentences of "[prep] it [det] [noun pl] " in BNC.
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1 | In the exercise of it many factors have to be considered besides the strength of the case . |
2 | and nature of Man — of convincing one 's nerves that the world is full of Misery and Heartbreak , Pain , Sickness and oppression — whereby this Chamber of Maiden-Thought becomes gradually darkened and at the same time on all sides of it many doors are set open — but all dark — all leading to dark passages . |
3 | And he just dived in there and and got hold of it these tools er once you get a hold of those things you know they they 're pretty They 're fantastic you they wo n't . |
4 | This does not seem to me a very sensible strategy , because on the face of it these ideas would appear to be of potential relevance to pedagogic practice . |
5 | You may not be aware of the Hayes Society , for few talk of it these days . |
6 | He does n't often speak of it these days , but — ’ |
7 | One at Duisker has a flat stone slab on the ground to the north of it some yards away ; standing on the slab and looking over the upright stone points to Kildalton but is there any significance ? |
8 | It can identify the brief passage of an animal that might have run across the ground in front of it several hours previously . |
9 | Er I said er Lisa 'd like to go out but er she do n't feel like it these days . |
10 | It was not only the blow of failing to win power , and with it all hopes of a Scottish parliament , but also the fact that Labour lost votes and a seat in Scotland — facts which are conveniently forgotten when home-rulers and guardians of the party 's traditional totems blame failure in the south for Labour 's lack of achievement in the north . |
11 | Once in a while , however , mud from the ridge above slipped down in a turbid cloud , carrying with it all kinds of small creatures and dumped them there . |
12 | The introduction of the remedy for each defect might , in itself , be considered a step from the pre-legal into the legal world ; since each remedy brings with it many elements that permeate law : certainly all three remedies together are enough to convert the regime of primary rules into what is indisputably a legal system … |
13 | [ E ] ven in this simplest form , such a rule brings with it many elements distinctive of law . |
14 | In a sense , then , survival into old age is a triumph , but a triumph that brings with it many problems , problems that tend to increase the longer one survives , the greater age one attains . |
15 | Indeed , it shares with it some elements of decoration , e.g. a band of wavecrest pattern around the central roundel . |
16 | At this stage we should look briefly at the third and final possibility , and with it some cases we shall not be discussing in this book . |
17 | I do n't suppose the unions would put up with it these days but er ha there were n't such things as unions for nurses in those days . |
18 | I du n no but it just that it 's so difficult to get away with it these days . |
19 | What we are in all our shapes and sizes has been fashioned and contoured through both inheritance and experience — the comprehensive impact upon us of our parents , childhood and upbringing , and with it those joys , dramas and significant experiences which contribute to what is sometimes called our adult self . |
20 | On 10 April 1982 , after Basrah crude had been regularly loading at Tripoli ( Lebanon ) and Banias for some while , the Syrian government — in a gesture of solidarity with Iran — closed the line and with it both ports . |
21 | It began to re-surface when Greg Farrel walked into the cottage with the swaggering confidence of a man who had walked into it many times before . |
22 | The BBC Scotland task force suggested that the best way to pursue these guarantees might be to reverse the previous arrangement and keep the licence money in Scotland , paying out from it those fees imposed for taking network programmes and utilising corporate resources . |
23 | He vowed to break his association with the board after being thrown back from it several feet across the room . |
24 | ‘ I ca n't get away from it these days , ’ said Amiss cheerfully . |
25 | Oh my darling , I am too happy and excited to be able to write all the things I want to say to you , so much is crowding in , so much has happened in such a short while and I want to pin down some of this marvellous feeling before it all rushes by and becomes more accepted — because , Betty , I do feel that we accept each other , there is a tolerance , a straightness between us that makes it all possible . |
26 | before it half drops , half |
27 | I 've also still got my old Gibson Melody Maker ; I put humbuckers in it many years ago and it 's got a really warm , big sound . |
28 | Æthelred 's confirmation of the will of Æthelric of Bocking , which is from no later than 999 , says that there was a plan to receive Swegen in Essex when he first came there with a fleet , and that Æthelred was told of Æthelric 's involvement in it many years before he died . |
29 | The other insists that science has much in common with model-making , which differs from mapping in the modeller 's licence to construct an artificial world and include in it all sorts of features beyond all possible observation . |
30 | I reckon that 's the additives they put in it these days . |