Example sentences of "[prep] [Wh adv] [adv] it " in BNC.

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1 The idea is to compare a store 's performance not just with its historical record , but with some more objective measure of how well it should be doing .
2 The survival of the 1947 constitution without major change since the US occupation ended , is taken as evidence of how well it fits with the attitudes and expectations of contemporary Japan .
3 If you ca n't hear me at the back because my voice drops from time to time then shout away because I 'm not always aware of how well it carries .
4 Smith 's application of Smelser 's model is forced to rely on an assortment of different examples and there is little sense of how well it applies to separate case studies .
5 If a firm is operating in a good , competitive market then , notwithstanding the problems associated with accounting measurements , profit does give an indication of how well it produced goods : the market was willing to pay more for the finished goods than it cost the firm to produce them , if the firm made a profit .
6 P.S. Please keep the sachet , as a reminder of how little it takes to save a child 's life .
7 An example of how little it matters to the speechreader is the sound of TH as in :
8 The knowledge of how easy it would be to just reach out and take the Robe of Eyes and wear it and be able to see into other people s deepest thoughts flooded her mind , scaldingly .
9 Andy Probert was an example of how emotionally it does .
10 That it is now required reading for the French Establishment and for anybody involved in business or education is a measure of how successfully it fulfilled its task without compromising a reputation for unbiased reporting .
11 Any elicitation procedure is itself subject to a degree of variation in terms of how successfully it stimulates a child to make a particular response .
12 Gironella 's solution was entirely individual : to focus on the art of the European past , looming large as it did in Latin American consciousness regardless of how often it had been declared dead and buried by Europeans .
13 Melville continues : ‘ The young people had no idea of how hard it would be .
14 He warned against overdependence on a single player who might be difficult to replace , and was thus well aware of how hard it would be when Alex James retired .
15 A number of British garages refused to quote for the job directly , giving only-their hourly-rates and an estimate of how long it would take .
16 It is not merely a matter of whether planning permission is required and , if so , whether it is likely to be granted , but also of how long it will take .
17 Some have done better than others , but there 's just the physical reality of how long it takes the lower two strings to speak — it 's going to take a few milliseconds for that to happen .
18 The engine driver also gave control some idea of how long it would take to clean the fire and raise sufficient steam for him to take his train forward .
19 It started to get out of proportion in that he , Ray has been talking to him about the impact of the summer season in Scarborough in terms of how long it takes his staff to get from A to B.
20 Naturally , the fragrant smell of wine reminded Cranston of how long it had been since he had refreshed himself so he ordered a large jug and the deepest goblet to be found in the kitchen .
21 For Dr Neil the feel of her , so soft , the scent of her hair , and of McAllister herself , was so wild and sweet and struck him with such force that his breathing grew a little ragged and his body reminded him of how long it had been since he had satisfied it .
22 Don and Steven made the most accurate estimates of how long it would take Courtaulds InterSpray , the Group 's entry in the race , to reach Rio de Janeiro from Southampton on the first leg .
23 If I asked for money from my husband he would talk of all the expenses , of how much it cost the family to keep me .
24 Clearly the question of how much it costs to sustain at home elderly people with dementia is a very important one , but it is one which is very difficult to answer .
25 And that night when Linnet , face to face with her own reflection in her solitary looking-glass and the stark realization of how much it had really meant to her , had been unable to sleep Tristan had walked with her for hours in the manor garden , Gemma watching them from her bedroom window as they paced beneath the chestnut trees , engrossed , almost entwined , like turning to like , intent wholly and exclusively upon one another .
26 And he has n't the least idea of how much it will come to .
27 The hon. Member for Sheffield , Brightside ( Mr. Blunkett ) raised the question of how much it cost to collect a tonne of rubbish in one place as opposed to another .
28 ‘ I 'm so sorry , ’ she said gently , well aware of how much it meant to her .
29 The Library Association is increasing efforts in parliamentary lobbying but the question of how far it wants to go in challenging the use of legislation for censorship is unclear .
30 ‘ I felt I never got a chance there , but I have been given the chance at Norwich and I 'm very pleased with how well it has gone . ’
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