Example sentences of "[prep] it [prep] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | It was from these that the ‘ grammatical rules of school textbooks ’ were derived , at least until the work of descriptive linguistics in this century , and perhaps still despite it in some cases . |
2 | They had reached the apartment block and there was a café below it with white metal tables and chairs out on the street . |
3 | Tailors in 1814 were very much on a level in terms of real wages with 1795 , but in the intervening years had been significantly down on that level in eight years , and very seriously below it in 1800 and 1801 when their weekly wage would buy only half the quantity of bread it had purchased from 1777 to 1795 . |
4 | What happens is this : it is swimming along on a near-horizontal plane when it spots a morsel of food , which it can see quite comfortably directly below it in shallow-enough water because its eyes are tilted downwards to allow for this facility . |
5 | Apart from disturbing the wrong occupants , the gallery was open to the hall below it in several places and she might be seen . |
6 | He had lived with his past for the best part of fifty years , and his book tells what he had come to know of it over that interval of time , with help from the theories of Marx and Freud . |
7 | If Clarke had intended to pursue his enquiries further , he obviously thought better of it under that formidable gaze . |
8 | To win a pound of gold the Rand miners had on the average to raise , crush and purify some sixty-seven tons of ore , much of it under extreme temperatures and from great depths . |
9 | Well I thought you gave a very clear and er convincing account of it despite that so congratulations , well done , that was excellent . |
10 | There is lot of it about these days and not just in the police service . |
11 | Ferguson , with only six goals to show from United 's last 12 games , has £5m to spend and would be reluctant to pour most of it into one signing . |
12 | He dropped my wrists and began picking at the bread , rolling bits of it into little grey balls . |
13 | All methods include : ( a ) grouping of material ( b ) an arrangement of it into some sort of sequence |
14 | Multiple layers of screening , much of it of dubious scientific validity , may become a routine feature of working life unless restraints are imposed by law , as some states have begun to do . |
15 | The sociology of culture , as it entered the second half of the twentieth century , was broadly compounded of work done from these two positions , much of it of great local value . |
16 | Since there is a body of theory associated with these routes , some of it of considerable generality , identification of one of the routes implies that the transition is at least partially understood . |
17 | ‘ Was any of it of any use , ’ I asked , ‘ My course I mean . ’ |
18 | You know you want to know and I would 've thought that the higher the management the more they want to know the implications , the financial of it of any plan which you 're going into . |
19 | Behaviour has to be shaped up , bit by bit until the child is able to complete the whole of it as one process . |
20 | But only lately have we come to think of it as one body , however large and interconnected it may be . |
21 | I was listening with half my mind to the essay my pupil was reading and although the ideas he was expressing ( about sense-data ) were in themselves neither new nor interesting they had set off ideas of my own , as the ideas in undergraduate essays often do — I think of it as one of the uncovenanted benefits of teaching . |
22 | Thus it is that the extraction of the origin of the first fragment of ‘ goodness ’ and the indelibly labelling of it as such , led to the creation of an entity with a presumed existence and endowed by mankind with the power to hold inviolate the human decisions on ‘ goodness ’ — which will continue to be taken for as long as life continues . |
23 | I was calling the L-shaped room home for the first time , and thinking of it as such . |
24 | The use of the split infinitive is now generally acceptable , though some more traditional grammarians would probably still disapprove of it as incorrect English . |
25 | He was wearing his captain 's uniform with meticulous correctness but with a consciously satirical air , ‘ as though he thought of it as fancy dress . ’ |
26 | Because his wife had made dishes of it as first-night presents for the cast , apart from Titania , who was on a diet and would have to be dealt with in some other way . |
27 | Ace thought of it as some sort of insect , although she knew it had too many legs . |
28 | ’ Think of it as another reason for you to stay away from big gorgeous women with enormous boobs ’ . |
29 | Just think of it as bad luck . ’ |
30 | Now this is not strictly a soul food recipe , but since Philadelphia is my home town and my family has eaten its way through tons of this , I always think of it as northern soul food . |