Example sentences of "[noun sg] [verb] it [art] " in BNC.
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1 | There was also substantial cross-group agreement on the selection of this feature , with most groups arguing that the 'summarising " nature of this sentence made it a strong candidate for an opening to the story . |
2 | Superb 3-D and a Dave Whittaker soundtrack make it a real high-flyer . |
3 | The Ideal had to close down , and a vandal 's brick made it the Id al , which spelled the end of an era . |
4 | The Times recorded that this was their sixth partnership of over 150 ; the Telegraph that it was their seventh century stand ; while the Guardian made it the eighth . |
5 | The advantages of disc in the storage of information and in speed of access to any part make it the more flexible combination , with a wider range of possible uses . |
6 | Its lushness and tropical variety made it a place of great beauty with winding roads and hair-pin bends giving spectacular views over the jungle . |
7 | In a follow-up survey , the great majority rated it the best AIDS resource they had seen . |
8 | The truth is that uphill the extra weight made it a little harder than walking , but the weight was not directly on my back , a fact that I appreciated . |
9 | Actor Lloyd Bridges and wife Dot made it a family day out with his son Beau , wife Juli and children . |
10 | Before re-assembling the valve give it a good clean and smear petroleum jelly on the piston and on the threads of the cap holding the washer , so that if necessary it can be undone more easily in the future . |
11 | This is magical , and gives the rider of any horse wearing it a +20 bonus to all Ride tests . |
12 | And the dam is turf Ed on the land ward side to give it the appearance of a gently sloping field . |
13 | One critic called it the Tate Gallery of the south west with works by Lowry , Henry Moore and Graham Sutherland displayed alongside local art . |
14 | Firstly , it was accepted by all Scots that the coronation of their king was valid only if carried out upon the Stone of Destiny , and in spite of the Christian ceremony accompanying it the right to place the crown on the new monarch 's head belonged irrevocably to the Earl of Fife , premier layman of the realm . |
15 | I do n't think he 'll be in any fit condition to do it every morning anyway . |
16 | The straps had been painted in Renaissance fold mixed with cadmium red light to give it a warmer , redder appearance . |
17 | In your road test of the Peugeot 605 SRdt ( 20 February ) you comment that the only car to give it a run for its money is the Citroen XM . |
18 | I 've a good mind to give it a miss . |
19 | A finish applied to the fabric to give it a watermarked appearance . |
20 | Mummy get it a big , big |
21 | The side Quiss belonged to called it Castle Doors , Ajayi 's side named it the Castle of Bequest . |
22 | ‘ Clive Griffiths , the Welsh coach , may persuade me to play against France in a few weeks ' time but I have made up my mind to call it a day , ’ he said last night . |
23 | Thirdly , the Act clearly adopts as the test of danger either ‘ the greater risk of harm ’ or ‘ the risk of greater harm ’ : an elephant may not in fact be very likely to get out of control and do damage , but if it does so , its bulk gives it a great capacity for harm . |
24 | Section 1 covers all forms of spying making it an offence if any person , for purposes prejudicial to the interests of the state : ( a ) approaches , inspects … enters any prohibited place ; or ( b ) makes any sketch , plan , model or note which … might be useful to the enemy : or ( c ) obtains or communicates to any other person any information … calculated or intended to be , or which might be useful to the enemy . |
25 | They grumble that the company 's membership of the British Franchise Association gave it a ring of confidence in which investors put their faith . |
26 | The other thing is I mean , erm , the , the Trone did it a couple of years ago , they have n't done it this year they |
27 | The company says the deal gives it the opportunity to distribute financial information to clients ' branch offices by using their own hardware and networks . |
28 | But when he had leapt off his horse to approach it the chest had sprouted legs and had gone trotting off into the forest , stopping again a few hundred yards away . |
29 | In the last-named work he opened up lines of interpretation which , even if somewhat modified since , set firm foundations on which other scholars might build : the exuberant vigour and almost Niagara-like outpouring of scholarship gave it a memorable quality . |
30 | Fully discharging a single NiCad cell does it no harm , as you state in the article . |