Example sentences of "[vb -s] it [adj] [verb] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Well he , what he has it permed does he then ?
2 Well it 's engineer that has the , has it all run now
3 ‘ Agnes has it all planned , ’ Mariot said .
4 Has it all come back ?
5 Has it all gone to literary criticism ?
6 Has it all gone ?
7 ‘ Elise has it all cut and dried already .
8 Why , if the Pacific era is upon us , has it all happened here ?
9 And it might say do not dry clean and the customer has it dry cleaned and of course the garment is very likely going to be ruined .
10 However , where such measures are adopted by a qualified majority , Article 100A(4) provides that ‘ a Member State which deems it necessary to apply national provisions on grounds of major needs referred to in art .
11 When he wants it all done by .
12 Brian Horton says it all happened so quickly … he got a phone call late on thursday morning but could not tell the players anything …
13 Brian Horton says it all happened so quickly … he got a phone call late on thursday morning but could not tell the players anything …
14 Says it ready to make stereotype judgements about personality , E G you can tell he 's anxious by his voice is in inverted commas or she sounds very strong minded .
15 It depends it all depends on whether Emma gives me my money .
16 Someone looks closely and cuts it open to see what comes out .
17 if she , if she gets it all signed over to her she signs all the bills over
18 Not just on my own he just said that , it was a bit bad cos I , I said to him , you know , who 's going and he listed like er reeled off , I ca n't remember , reeled off a load of blokes yes last night and I said are there any girls going and he said well I 'll see if I can get Laura and Giles to come and I said yeah I feel much better about that , you know , whatever and then today he said erm look ca n't go and was a real , I du n no he 's got something and he 's usually like the real medium and he , you know , if there 's e if there 's ever like a pregnant pause then he 's the one that like keeps it all going
19 Thus the new State finds it necessary to accommodate precisely those processes which were one of the sources of the original movement of national liberation .
20 Every time the animal steps down it received a mild electric shock ( yet another of the less than pleasant learning tasks which experimental psychology finds it necessary to employ ) .
21 He works at weekends as a hospital porter , and finds it necessary to take a week off to compete in a national or international event .
22 Because of his tense disposition , Trish finds it necessary to work Will most days .
23 ICL 's second trophy went to its Bracknell , Berkshire-based Mid Range Systems division for the volume of DRS 6000 series systems and associated Unix products and services shipped abroad — its revenues are reckoned to have trebled over the past three years to over £250m ; Cambridge-based IXI Ltd was recognised for its success in the open systems software arena with its X.desktop product for Unix , and Chalfont , Buckinghamshire-based Madge Networks Ltd , which ships its high performance Token Ring networking products across the world , and finds it necessary to kid the locals that it 's an American company when it is doing business in the US , also wins an Export award .
24 If he finds it necessary to copy , to study the work of other painters , or any way to seek for help out of himself , he may be sure that he has received nothing of that inspiration .
25 We are confirmed in our impression that line A is not perspicuous by the fact that a modern version like NIV finds it necessary to offer an expanded rendering : " Lebanon is not sufficient for altar fires " ( my italics ) .
26 Failure to talk about sexual needs may mean that the individual does not consider it to be a problem , or that he or she finds it embarrassing to discuss such matters .
27 Now , Colonel Bumford is very typical of the type of regular officer , who is so orthodox and cautious , he finds it safer to put off making decisions rather than risk wrong ones . ’
28 Such an interpretation of the law of karma which may have satisfied orthodox Hindus is rejected by Gandhi out of hand , for he finds it inconceivable to divorce morality from religion .
29 Open learning is suitable for many people : for the interested housewife ; for people working full or part-time with horses ; for those working in other industries who are keen on horses ; for people who are about to embark on courses at colleges or training centres , helping them to prepare for what lies ahead ; to update knowledge ; or for experienced competitive horse owners or weekly riders — in fact anyone who finds it impractical to pursue their equestrian education by conventional means .
30 A growing band of countries finds it impossible to borrow a penny from anyone without having received the IMF 's seal of good housekeeping .
  Next page