Example sentences of "it [verb] [adv] [verb] the " in BNC.
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1 | It zoomed in to introduce the IntelliServer terminal server for local area networks . |
2 | This County Council failed to do it from the time , time it was formed until eighty-five ; it failed even to address the problem , never mind do it , and we 've been trying to , to sort of do some catching up . |
3 | When the box falls from the tree and hits the ground , it splits open scattering the nuts . |
4 | … As to the matter of there being no appeal from an arbitrary sentence ; it is true , the case is the harder , because the party is concluded by one judgment , but it doth not lessen the validity of the sentence , nor doth it in any way prove that you shall find out some way to examine this matter at law in a judicial proceeding . |
5 | From here it turns right to follow the shore until it reaches the mouth of the River Avich . |
6 | Shortly before Christmas and in the middle of correcting the proofs , he wrote to Rohde again : " The whole last part , which you do not know , will certainly astonish you ; I have been very daring , and I can cry out to myself in an altogether enormous sense , animam salvavi [ I have saved my soul ] ; for which reason I think of the book with great satisfaction and am not worried for it turns out to cause the greatest possible offence and in some quarters a " cry of outrage " greets its publication . |
7 | It goes on to define the objective of this policy as safeguarding ‘ the common values , fundamental interests and independence of the Union ’ . |
8 | It goes on flouting the popular will by refusing a referendum on the Maastricht treaty . |
9 | How a nation safeguards the freedom of the meanest and least powerful of its people to protest , and how , it goes about redressing the just grievances of those and of others , will determine in part its degree of civilisation and its right to a place in the pantheon of nations . |
10 | A body may be acting within the scope of its authority at the outset but may , by the way it goes about taking the decision , go outside the four corners of the Act . |
11 | It involves sharply pulling the sail towards you which , for an instant , creates more wind and hence more power . |
12 | Would it seek merely to codify the existing case law or to reform on the existing case law ? |
13 | As I have argued in previous chapters , reconsidering that history helps us to reconsider psychoanalysis , especially the way it incorporates yet obscures the perverse dynamic . |
14 | Thence it drops down to cross the Cherwell at Banbury . |
15 | The relation between contemporary modes of communication and the contemporary novel may not always be obvious or straightforward , but it has profoundly changed the ways in which people think about fiction and the value they attach to reading . |
16 | The first sortie on to the Promenade was made on June 6 , and two days later was taken round the whole system to test for clearances. 641 was passed by the Railway Inspector as ready for service on 3 July , since which time it has regularly operated the Fleetwood service . |
17 | While this has greatly reduced the archival storage problem it has probably made the access problem worse . |
18 | The railway offers a scenic eight mile ride in a variety of coaches from Europe and Africa — it has astutely cornered the market in demonstrating foreign narrow-gauge rail travel . |
19 | CITROEN disputes Daihatsu 's economical motoring laurels ; while admitting that it has not tackled the Round Britain run yet , it says that its AX diesel has achieved 112.01 mph over a 100 mile road route . |
20 | If the agency then acts differently it may be held to have acted unfairly and illegally , at least if it has not given the citizen a chance to make representations as to why he or she should be treated in the way expected . |
21 | This has reversed the rule in Harbutts Plasticine Ltd v Wayne Tank and Pump Co Ltd [ 1970 ] 1 QB 447 , but it has not affected the rule in the Suisse Atlantique case [ 1967 ] 1 AC 61 that exemption clauses can not be construed to apply to fundamental breach unless clearly stated to do so ( See also the Securicor case mentioned above , where an exclusion clause was found to be drafted so widely as to exclude liability for a wilful default which was also a fundamental breach of the contract . ) |
22 | If however it has not reached the scale then level your wings and hold a 40° intercept ( 050° in fig 52 ) and continue your turn when it is 1 to 2 dots on the scale . |
23 | It has not escaped the fate of having to get rid of the father . |
24 | We hope that it has not escaped the reader that the predictions concerning the different effects of word and feature masks do not depend on the mask being a word ; they depend only on the mask being composed of letters . |
25 | I hope , however , that it has not escaped the attention of the Leader of the House that one of the most famous companies in Scotland , Armitage Shanks of Barrhead , is facing closure because of the parent company 's axe . |
26 | So , while the Government has put some effort into educating people about healthy eating , it has not made the necessary changes in policy and practice that are required to make a healthier diet possible . |
27 | 7 : Nirex , the body appointed by the Government to find an underground repository ( dump ) for intermediate level nuclear waste had admitted it has not solved the problems associated with the migration of radionuclides into the biosphere . |
28 | But it has not solved the huge problems inherited from the past |
29 | At least this is not a bought-deal : Hoare is acting as broker — it has not purchased the shares itself and is stuck with no potential loss . |
30 | The court takes the view that it has not had the benefit of seeing the witnesses , hearing their evidence and forming opinions as to the weight to be attached to it . |