Example sentences of "it [verb] [to-vb] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Management could be faced ‘ with severe economic losses if it failed to take into account their views , or to win their consent on issues which were felt to be of major importance by the workforce ’ ( p. 314 ) . |
2 | Given all this , a chapter about kitchens and kitchen decoration would be illogical to say the least , if it failed to take into account the room or area where food is served , which should bc as pleasant a place as possible . |
3 | Consequently , unlike Canterbury , it failed to keep in line with the Roman practice when the fourteenth day of the moon fell on a Sunday . |
4 | It neglects to take into account the possibility that people might also attach a comparable value to environmental protection , and similarly fails to attach a value to the contribution vehicles make to acid rain and greenhouse gas emissions . |
5 | The first question to ask is how much time does it want to spend on music overall ? |
6 | Playing with a puppy for a period beforehand often helps to make it want to sleep at night . |
7 | It must be awful thing and of course you tend if , if you have n't got it to tend to think for god sake , you know it 's a , it 's a nice day |
8 | They replaces Reflex Actions ( S4 ) to which , in fact , it needs to stand in contrast . |
9 | And again to spell that out erm the way it needs to work in practice I believe is that in its local plan a local authority should be able to define a site which it would regard as suitable for development only for these strategically important reasons . |
10 | Now the town is going for the big one , but to get the title Entente Florale , it needs to beat off competition from seven other nations . |
11 | Gartner has focused on the mid-range — apart from the money it has to spend on consultancy one assumes — because it believes the ‘ heritage of open systems has been to solve mid-range problems . ’ |
12 | It has to do with land as well as landscape , and the right to farm in a time-honoured way . ’ |
13 | It has to do with music . |
14 | It is possible that it has to do with cannibalism . |
15 | Nothing illustrates better the fluidity of viewpoints by which we can swing towards and away from egoism , and how little it has to do with morality . |
16 | And it has to do with bed hygiene , for you do n't become allergic to the mite — you become allergic to the mite 's dung . |
17 | I think part of it has to do with recognition — I remember listening to my own grandmother 's mysterious pronouncements — and part with a renewed sense of the strangeness of it . |
18 | I think er a lot of it has to do with confidence , the more confidence you get the quieter driving erm , I 'm afraid the more aggressive you become whether your a man or a woman but er quiet . |
19 | It has to do with superconductivity . ’ |
20 | Any action has to be additional to member states ' own policies ; it has to take into account the views of the region ; it has to be adopted unanimously by the Council , and the European Parliament ( EP ) can veto it . |
21 | It may take some time to program this technique as it has to take into account all foreseeable circumstances . |
22 | Its mellow character is compounded of its age , its comfortable lack of pretension and the various roles it has to play as farm , design studio and home . ’ |
23 | Conservatives on Oxfordshire County Council have dismissed claims that there 'll have to be major cuts in services if it has to stick to Government budget estimates . |
24 | The DECpc AXP/150 is priced at £5,350 , which sounds expensive compared with DEC 's two new Pentium ready models , DECpc DT and DECpc MTE , priced at £1,395 and £2,095 respectively , especially as almost all the software for it has to run in emulation mode using Insignia Solutions Ltd 's SoftPC , which provides support for MS-DOS and 16-bit Windows applications . |
25 | The coinage evidence is no less significant , but its nature will become sufficiently apparent when we examine what it has to offer in Chapter 5 . |
26 | Because egalitarian feminist psychology wants to adapt conventional psychology , rather than replace it , it has to begin from psychology 's self-definition . |
27 | In Stroud it has to come from hospital time . |
28 | One can not fly the aircraft ‘ hands off ’ because after a short while it starts to wander off course ’ . |
29 | Such trends are embodied in the DFG 's rolling research schemes described above , which it plans to continue in spite of some hassles , for example in getting the university to provide promised backup , or take over schemes when the DFG ‘ pump-priming ’ funds run out . |
30 | Next , it plans to get into television as well . |