Example sentences of "[prep] it [prep] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It was from these that the ‘ grammatical rules of school textbooks ’ were derived , at least until the work of descriptive linguistics in this century , and perhaps still despite it in some cases .
2 They had reached the apartment block and there was a café below it with white metal tables and chairs out on the street .
3 What happens is this : it is swimming along on a near-horizontal plane when it spots a morsel of food , which it can see quite comfortably directly below it in shallow-enough water because its eyes are tilted downwards to allow for this facility .
4 Apart from disturbing the wrong occupants , the gallery was open to the hall below it in several places and she might be seen .
5 He had lived with his past for the best part of fifty years , and his book tells what he had come to know of it over that interval of time , with help from the theories of Marx and Freud .
6 To win a pound of gold the Rand miners had on the average to raise , crush and purify some sixty-seven tons of ore , much of it under extreme temperatures and from great depths .
7 There is lot of it about these days and not just in the police service .
8 Ferguson , with only six goals to show from United 's last 12 games , has £5m to spend and would be reluctant to pour most of it into one signing .
9 All methods include : ( a ) grouping of material ( b ) an arrangement of it into some sort of sequence
10 Since there is a body of theory associated with these routes , some of it of considerable generality , identification of one of the routes implies that the transition is at least partially understood .
11 You know you want to know and I would 've thought that the higher the management the more they want to know the implications , the financial of it of any plan which you 're going into .
12 ‘ Was any of it of any use , ’ I asked , ‘ My course I mean . ’
13 Behaviour has to be shaped up , bit by bit until the child is able to complete the whole of it as one process .
14 But only lately have we come to think of it as one body , however large and interconnected it may be .
15 The use of the split infinitive is now generally acceptable , though some more traditional grammarians would probably still disapprove of it as incorrect English .
16 He was wearing his captain 's uniform with meticulous correctness but with a consciously satirical air , ‘ as though he thought of it as fancy dress . ’
17 Because his wife had made dishes of it as first-night presents for the cast , apart from Titania , who was on a diet and would have to be dealt with in some other way .
18 Ace thought of it as some sort of insect , although she knew it had too many legs .
19 ’ Think of it as another reason for you to stay away from big gorgeous women with enormous boobs ’ .
20 Just think of it as bad luck . ’
21 Now this is not strictly a soul food recipe , but since Philadelphia is my home town and my family has eaten its way through tons of this , I always think of it as northern soul food .
22 ‘ But I have conquered this disease before and been free of it for two years .
23 Men were to talk of it for many years to come .
24 The Leader of the Opposition claims that he has been a consistent supporter of the Common Market for years , but everyone knows that he was a consistent and bitter opponent of it for many years .
25 Muslims and Jews want to get rid of it for religious reasons ; Americans want ( wanted ? ) to get rid of it for hygienic reasons and for the hypothetical reduced risk of penile cancer in the circumcised population ; Latins love to play with it , like to keep it , and are taught to mobilise it often ; the British would like to ignore it , not to touch it , and eventually get rid of it when it causes too much trouble .
26 I had sight of it for five minutes and decided to use it . ’
27 If so , please take note of it for future reference .
28 Muslims and Jews want to get rid of it for religious reasons ; Americans want ( wanted ? ) to get rid of it for hygienic reasons and for the hypothetical reduced risk of penile cancer in the circumcised population ; Latins love to play with it , like to keep it , and are taught to mobilise it often ; the British would like to ignore it , not to touch it , and eventually get rid of it when it causes too much trouble .
29 It 's mainly for adults , but the Home Office is considering using part of it for young people awaiting trial or sentence.It 's that potential for criminal cross fetilisation that 's worrying the Howard League for Penal Reform .
30 Together with the credits provided by export credit agencies , much of it for military hardware , this policy has culminated in the late 1980s in the accumulation of a mountain of debt which can not be serviced on the original schedule of payments .
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