Example sentences of "[adv] [prep] it [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | I 'm actually going to go in for it in the Telegraph 's competition , so I may as well use the same team for our one if it gets going . |
2 | A rat as big as a cat scurried down a steep slope and a small bush slid down after it in the torrential downpour . |
3 | There are billions of galaxies much like it in the Universe . |
4 | ‘ A Scotch , please — plenty of soda , ’ said Greg , and settled down with it into the sofa . |
5 | linked in with it at the moment . |
6 | Jasper sensed some of this and vowed not to go along with it in the sheeplike fashion of the others . |
7 | Crowds of spectators were thronging the sides of the narrow road which led down from it into the village and , after Vitor had hurriedly found a parking place , they joined them . |
8 | she 's obviously in it for the bet . |
9 | I 'm only in it for the fund-raising ! |
10 | Kim 's only in it for the money . |
11 | ‘ I agree , but then he was only in it for the money . |
12 | This completes the picture of the perfect rock'n'roll group ; a tidal wave of Jack Daniels coolness , that carried all before it at the Stadium . |
13 | But there does n't seem to be much in it for the peoples themselves . |
14 | There seems little doubt that Trow Gill once brought down a stream , this entering as a waterfall at the gap now occupied by boulders , and this theory is confirmed by the dry channel coming directly down to it from the heights above . |
15 | As with Frankie , so much of the pleasure is bound up with the sense of something breaking out all over the surfaces of everyday life , and you being in on it from the start . |
16 | There 's a little row that goes down beside it round the back , I never knew there was . |
17 | While ideally this should be the chairman there may be someone even better at it in the group . |
18 | So clearly now , the , there 's some merit in looking afresh at it in the light of five B , being able to match the kind of funding that 's available there . |
19 | The villagers looked down at it with the satisfaction of those who could n't swim and certainly would n't want to try . |
20 | ‘ So why not bring a little of it into the office ? ’ |
21 | This can now be seen at Scotland 's only Thai restaurant , Buntom 's in Nelson Street , the proprietors having given most generously for it to the cause . |
22 | Having quoted the opening of Gormenghast in 1.4 as an example of an opaque style , we shall now return to another passage which occurs shortly after it in the same novel . |
23 | Their prey this morning was Lawn House , lying just below it on the hillside . |
24 | Will he get away with it for the rest of his life ? ’ |
25 | ‘ If I can get drunk enough on this stuff I might be able to get away with it at the next repatriation board . ’ |
26 | Scotland seem to have got away with it at the moment . |
27 | But then there were the terns getting away with it on the other side of the window . ’ |
28 | That does n't mean to say that you 'd have let them necessarily get away with it on the spot but you you 're still going to do a persuasive tact but in the end if they say no fine . |
29 | Managers need to be alert to the influences that in combination persuade staff to take ( and condone others taking ) short cuts through the safety rules and procedures because , mistakenly , the perceived benefits outweigh the risks , and they have perhaps got away with it in the past . |
30 | Tap , tap , tap , sparks flying everywhere and we were just above it with the cranes , waiting to fill the big ladles . |