Example sentences of "[subord] it [vb -s] the " in BNC.

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1 Children will enjoy seeing the chaos as Henry leads all the young animals out into the forest , where it takes the farmer a long time to catch them .
2 She has hung ‘ Christabel ’ in her bedroom where it catches the morning sun and shows up my imperfections .
3 The proposal for a Rhyl relief road could mean yet another where it crosses the A525 .
4 LASMO is now active in The Netherlands where it operates the Markham field which straddles the border between the UK and The Netherlands .
5 TNF α additionally induces expression of the powerfully procoagulant tissue factor , released only at sites of endothelial damage where it activates the extrinsic limb of the coagulation cascade .
6 As usual , rainwater fills up the aquifer and water flows out from it where it meets the surface .
7 There was coppa , made from the muscular part of the pig 's neck where it meets the shoulder , and prosciutto , Parma ham , which comes from the same part of the pig as English gammon , and is cured in specially air-cooled rooms up in the foothills of the Apennines above Parma .
8 The aim of the association is to acquire greater access to the countryside in areas where it feels the public is unreasonably excluded .
9 It is however a strong argument in the sense that it aims to attack the notion of justified belief in just those areas where it attacks the notion of knowledge .
10 They produce beef that no one will buy at the price at which they want to sell it , so they are subsidised by the European taxpayer to dump it in West Africa , where it destroys the livelihoods of poor farmers .
11 In Spain it weathers into the mushrooms , ships and other weird pinnacles of the Ciudad Encantada ( Enchanted City ) near where it shades the back streets of Cuenca ( plate 1.1 ) .
12 Complex instances of the clause occur in the following cases discussed : D. 34.3.28.1 , where it amounts to a repetitio of the provisions of an earlier will ; D. 32.34.3 , where it imposes the burden of paying dispositions on one of the heirs in particular ; D. 40.5.56 , where it amounts to a repetitio of dispositions from the substitute heirs .
13 Butt up a whole panel against the skirting and mark off where it overlaps the last fixed panels .
14 This coordination of two developmental events , crucial to the formation of the eye , is achieved in some animals by the approaching eyecup inducing the lens to develop just where it touches the surface , and so the lens develops at the right place .
15 These jettison the shared medium of Ethernet in favour of a star-shaped configuration in which each networked device sits at the end of its own private Ethernet segment , where it gets the benefit of the whole 10Mbps .
16 We shall begin by discussing uses where it expresses the mere state of being aware of a fact , a sense which calls for the use of the to and never the bare infinitive .
17 It makes its appearance on the bold ridge by the Rollright Stones , where it forms the boundary between Warwickshire and Oxfordshire for part of its course .
18 During the year the division increased its stake in Spanish concern Grupo General Cable SA ( CI No 1,996 ) also and also acquired KWO in Germany ( CI No 1,874 ) where it reckons the ‘ medium term ’ growth prospects are strong .
19 This particularly applies where it appears the public is being parted from its money without receiving , or being likely to receive , anything in return .
20 Now on the agenda are proposals to widen and realign the Woolmer Road , together with an improved junction where it joins the A325 north of the village .
21 A ‘ volute ’ in guitar terms is a carved hump or peak of wood at the back of the neck , just where it joins the headstock .
22 Cut just under the leaf , where it joins the stem .
23 The Church of the Protection and Intercession of the Virgin , 1165 ( the Church of Pokrov ) is also near the river Nerl where it joins the river Klyazma .
24 Because the Isle of Dogs is really a peninsula , it gets congested where it joins the land .
25 Within two or three minutes , the alcohol reaches Liz 's brain , where it affects the walls of individual brain cells slowing the rate at which electrical thought impulses can flash from one cell to another .
26 Where it studies the specific characteristics of old and young subjects , it makes age the single focus of investigation , and frequently ignores gender differences .
27 The path becomes very rough where it leaves the burn and climbs steeply out of the glen .
28 The cannon ball does not stop where it hits the ground , but bounces straight forward and cuts a line through any targets in the way .
29 He holds the view that an ill fish wo n't sit in full sun in the middle of the water , where it runs the risk of predation , but will hide , usually in the shade at the edge of the water , where the temperature will be much lower .
30 This is particularly noticeable in conifers such as yew , spruce or fir , where it makes the canopy increasingly lace-like or transparent .
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