Example sentences of "that [pron] [verb] it [adv] " in BNC.

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1 The experience was painful enough to ensure that no-one did it again ; it simply was n't worth the risk .
2 I am not sure now if I ever proceeded to knock ; it is quite possible , given the alarming nature of what I heard , that I judged it best to withdraw altogether .
3 The point of this is not the trivial name involved , but the fact that I remember it so clearly .
4 It was n't until much later that I saw it metaphorically .
5 ‘ But if I 'm honest , I must admit that I regret it now . ’
6 Now I know I went to a sp a specialist and that I mean it just keeps on coming back you know , maybe I 'll
7 I remember that she asked me to guess what was inside a sort of pasty served to her on Thásos , and that I got it right at the first guess : macaroni .
8 ‘ She was so bad that I thought it well to have oxygen administered ; this I procured from Blake , Edgar 's .
9 When I spoke I made it clear that I intended to do something about the position of the ‘ early leavers ’ and that I thought it right that people should not suffer if they transferred their pension from one job to another .
10 She thought , Now he 'll say what he was going to say last night , except that I made it hard for him , I was so unloving , so unresponsive .
11 ‘ I do n't know that I like it exactly .
12 ‘ It 's just that I like it here with you .
13 I 'll get that I like it so it 's er I did n't
14 It added a phrase so extraordinary that I quote it directly : ’ although these were felt to be isolated incidents . ’
15 The Bloods/Crips programme is so infinitely the best scheme for recovering LA thus far offered that I append it here in its vivacious entirety .
16 I wish only to make the point that I think it wrong that Opposition Members should seek to criticise my right hon. Friend the Member for Chingford , who has fairly raised a matter that carries with it considerable concern in all strata of society .
17 It is in this sense , of having an abnormal number of our normal needs unmet , that I think it right to speak of disabled people as not being normal .
18 You may say also that I think it well that the musters of the northern counties should prepare themselves for possible action against the Scots at the same date , and those along the south coast should be ready to resist any assault by sea from my enemies in Europe .
19 I recall reading that I think it possibly was Skerrymor or Cape Wrath but it was stated that the pendulum clock actually stopped .
20 ‘ I do n't know that I want it anywhere . ’
21 ‘ But whatever it is I do n't think that I need it now . ’
22 The wide , airy nature of the streets here give the city a marvellously spacious feel , so that I found it most easy to spend some hours just strolling in the gently warm sunshine .
23 Perhaps it 's because the sport seems ironically so urban that I find it less than thrilling .
24 In these circumstances in my judgment there is entirely adequate support for Paul of the sort that Mrs envisaged and indeed I am inclined to the view that one to one dedicated support for him out of classroom hours may not be desirable and might well tend at least to come between him and his fellow pupils so if one turns to Mrs schedule one on page forty seven , papers before me , I think that the appropriate arithmetic is to provide for twenty hours per week at seven pounds per hour for thirty seven school weeks , that is an enabler for the school period , I confess that I find it much easier to deal with Mrs schedules on page forty seven by treating schedule one as having to do with the , the school period , schedule two having to deal with the home periods and schedule three with parental care , as it is actually set out on page forty seven , and I confess that during the case I kept confusing myself about this point , schedule one deals not only with school but also , rather confusingly , with an enabler at home and I think it easier to confine that schedule to er school time .
25 No , well you 're right except that I find it more convenient to replace my booklets if I 'm in er Cardiff on my weekend when I happen to pass a tax office I pop in , replace them .
26 The other factor against a return was that I reckoned it only a matter of time before they stopped being DINKS ( double income , no kids ) and became WHANnies ( ‘ We have a Nanny ’ ) .
27 ‘ I wonder what was in the briefcase that someone wanted it so badly ? ’ he said aloud .
28 ‘ I do n't think that ye like it here . ’
29 Certain individuals did — I do n't want you to think that nobody took it seriously , but my feeling was that in the school there was no great sort of feeling that there was something important going on during the self-appraisal .
30 She recognized then that she desired it so — that she would , if she could , make it so .
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