Example sentences of "[vb past] it [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 To distinguish it from the medieval part of the college which hugs the splendid fifteenth-century cloisters , they called it New Buildings .
2 Then Trevino 's 1972 success made it back-to-back Opens for the Mexican-American .
3 I do n't think it was just because he made it back-to-back wins , either .
4 ‘ He got it wrong Wigs by Clarkson as if it mattered .
5 In 1983 , when a much smaller number of students completed IT Advanced Courses , 14 per cent were unemployed at the end of their courses ( 1 ) , a figure which halved in the following six months ( 2 ) .
6 Of the 287 people who saw the Carlyle exhibition , 94% rated it as Very Good or Good ; 90% of the 237 visitors who saw the MacLean exhibition gave it similar ratings ; and 78% of the 147 visitors to the Skinner exhibition considered it Very Good or Good .
7 Telford gave it hollow spandrels to lighten the load on the foundations , which also gives a deceptive appearance of lightness to the structure ; and the roadway does not rise to the crown of the arch , which was usually done to ensure that rainwater would not lie on the road surface .
8 Announced as the strongest environmental protection agency in Europe , Parliament gave it extensive powers .
9 Her long blonde hair seemed to come alive in the sunlight which gave it golden highlights .
10 We also gave it top marks for looks .
11 They gave it double smiles and blank silence
12 ‘ The thing about McGahern is that although 6 out of 8 Irish critics were against it most of the foreign reviewers , including The Observer and Guardian and New York Times , gave it glowing reviews .
13 Shortly after the sack , Stamford was granted its great Charter of Incorporation by the newly acclaimed Yorkist king Edward IV , which gave it considerable rewards for its loyalty ( an earlier charter of 972 , which was a post-conquest forgery , and only referred to the mint at Stamford , was still celebrated in 1972 ) .
14 Its administrative monopoly gave it special privileges and preferential economic treatment .
15 This earned it black marks in the eyes of its founder , Beamish , who considered it a decrepit and defunct organization not worthy of his continuing support .
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