Example sentences of "[art] [noun sg] [verb] it [prep] " in BNC.

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1 The coin looked as if the minter struck it on a single die , punching the image in the metal in repoussé , so hard that the inverted ear on the reverse would appear on the other side , and could be read the right way round in shallow relief when the coin was turned over .
2 All that was necessary was for the porter to replace it on the wrong nail before going to Compline , and leave her its ineffective twin .
3 The policy is to educate pupils to cope with the technology and give them the opportunity to exploit it in their future work and leisure .
4 Marc would lap up the opportunity to use it against her .
5 More important , support for the League would be maximized if people were given the opportunity to support it without supporting war .
6 to do and we 're going to have the opportunity to do it in a slightly interesting way and you failed miserably because you sat and chatted and did n't get any work done .
7 You will receive a copy of the report and have the opportunity to discuss it in an interview .
8 All of these methods of teaching are based on the understanding that , in addition to being given information , young people need the opportunity to discover it for themselves .
9 The Earl had ruled Cornwall almost as an independent principality , separate from the royal administration of the English shires , and Henry was doubtless glad of the opportunity to integrate it into his system of government especially since at this period production of tin from the Cornish mines was booming .
10 Unable to stop the spell which has made the broom fetch water , the apprentice breaks it in two only to have both halves doing the job at twice the speed .
11 It 's about six feet in height and just about shoulder width , er it 's coloured black and it has a bullet proof glass window of about six inches by four inches which enables the er officer behind the shield to manoeuvre it in the correct position .
12 The prince sent it to her with his love , just like that .
13 When Anna brought it home — some thirty years ago it must be — the prince put it in his pocket .
14 The Prince inherited it upon becoming Prince of Wales and will lose it if and when he becomes King .
15 They are centred around a flower festival at St John 's from today until Sunday and include two organ recitals by Dr Donald Davison and an exhibition on the history of Malone parish , which will be presented by parishioner Dr Paul Larmour , the writer Take it from me , nobody knows more about the past of that part of Belfast than Paul .
16 When mounting the mercury switch S1 , position the switch body about 10mm above the board to allow it to be angled to adjust its sensitivity .
17 Sister Eillen Regan , from the board of education of the Roman Catholic archdiocese of San Francisco , says the board shunned it for two reasons : ‘ It treats nuclear war as survivable and implies nuclear war is a political option ’ .
18 If , in these cases , the creditor leaves it to the debtor to procure the third party to provide the security , it is , in my opinion , almost inconceivable that the approach referred to by Dixon J. would be adopted so as to enable the surety to repudiate liability .
19 The debtor is not , in general , the agent of the creditor whether or not the creditor leaves it to the debtor to procure the third party security .
20 ( 3 ) Where the creditor leaves it to the debtor to obtain the signature of a third party surety on documents of guarantee or on documents charging the surety 's principal or important asset , it exposes itself to the possibility of being restrained under applicable equitable doctrines .
21 Yet a couple of features in the sentence push it towards Orientation : it contains an explicit temporal signal in the form of " when " and , more significantly , contains a past progressive verb phrase ( " he was sitting " ) .
22 But its real take-off period was the 1870S when the introduction of a new cooling apparatus and the addition of chemical preservatives to the milk enabled it to be transported very long distances while remaining fresh .
23 The south-west was far enough from the established centres of power for those who felt excluded from the throne to use it as a launching pad for rebellion .
24 Graham 's father actually gave him the money to buy it from Brixton , after we 'd been there to see it .
25 To allow the solicitor who has prepared the case to take it in court would not be a perfect solution , but might be some improvement .
26 The only other problem was found with the speaker support bracket which had no screw hole or a corresponding hole in the case to fix it to .
27 In addition , the victor sees it as a sign of capitulation by his opponent .
28 If you are scoring the tests yourself , rather than getting the computer to do it for you , then always do so at the same time of day — otherwise there would be variability due to time-of-day effects upon your scoring ability .
29 In order to keep the sorted list , the school librarian or teacher would have to ask the computer to save it on disk i.e. copy it on to the floppy disk .
30 We have to put a shelf mark on the books so that we can shelve the book , but that tells us quite a lot about the subject , and if you start putting those three things together the librarian , as manager of his library , can start to put all this information together — in fact , the computer digests it for him — to give him an overview of how effective his operation is , when he should be buying extra copies , when perhaps he should be thinking of not buying quite so much , or being a little more selective .
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