Example sentences of "[be] [adv] it [verb] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Yeah , but it 's somebody sitting in an office in n it deciding this !
2 ‘ But at the moment whenever I go back to Melbourne after being abroad it seems homelier every time .
3 Well it 's just it gets dark a bi it still gets dark early and when we 've got the children , I mean
4 Well that weight , that weight it 's just it felt comfortable to wear .
5 What is more it had gold tassels , a feature only found in America , nowhere else in the Salvation Army world .
6 I , things keep going through my head every time my head 's like it got this little what do you call it in , one of those erm like a live wire , just keeps going up and down and all the time .
7 No no I mean it 's er it it it is only polite is n't it to do that er
8 Is n't it becoming dangerous ?
9 is n't it to think that
10 Well this I think 's Well it smells better than camomile tea .
11 What we do not know is how it squares those beliefs with its later beliefs in market forces , the EC and industrial efficiency .
12 ‘ This is how it started last time . ’
13 Leroy Rosenior got the equaliser just before half-time and that 's how it finished 1-1 .
14 Well we travelled through the night mostly , we got to erm no we got to no-man 's land that 's when it got bad .
15 I do n't like the idea of great numbers getting together , that 's when it becomes dangerous
16 and he says to them , the thing is when it goes wrong
17 ‘ It can be a very lonely job , for both man and dog , which is why it involves such a special relationship , ’ Keith explained .
18 ‘ But this is where it gets tricky .
19 ‘ This is where it gets difficult to explain .
20 Now this is where it gets interesting .
21 This is where it becomes important to distinguish whether New Historicism uses the cultural anecdote as necessary to focus the general sense of the culture , or whether it offers a selectively constructed view of the culture necessary to the roundness of the New Historicist 's negotiation .
22 Unless there is some way to block it early on , aluminium has virtually free access into cells — which is where it does most of its damage .
23 Such a heroic venture requires heroic singing , and that is where it seemed this enthralling evening would fall short of its target .
24 It 's trying to do the same work with the smaller amount of blood as it did with the full amount , ten pints perhaps reduced down to seven , got to keep pump , pump , pump , pump , pump , pump , pump , because that little bit of blood has got to get round and do a lot more work now , okay , so the blood 's rushing round and the heart is pushing faster because it 's having to , because it 's not enough of the , not so much pressure there , that 's why it feels weak , weak and fast , okay ?
25 ( That 's why it gets used for only small and specialized purposes , not for things like spaceships hulls ) .
26 That 's why it smells awful .
27 Because they 're geared to Marks and Spencers , now there 's the advert for them they work with , with mass production , that 's where it goes wrong because we 've lost our individuality and so I go to the Italians in order to get the sort of yarns they offer me , now they 're the sort of yarns they offer me .
28 That 's where it hurt most , the thumb .
29 It is not as though his position is remotely like that of modern emotivists who have compared ethical statements with imperatives ( and Hare 's ethics differs most from Kant 's where it comes nearest to emotivism ) .
30 Because i i they though it was in competition with other varieties around and it something t It was n't necessarily to do with the fact that erm they though it was less it held less prestige in the community .
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