Example sentences of "it [conj] [det] [noun] of " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The register and index have to be open for inspection during business hours by any member without charge and by any other person on payment of a small fee and a copy of it or any part of it has to be supplied to anyone on payment of a modest charge .
2 It does not contain and should not be treated as constituting any representation in connection with any offer or invitation , nor shall it or any part of it form the basis or be relied upon in any way in connection with any contract relating to any securities .
3 He looked upwards now at the bunting stretched across the girders of the platform , then said , ‘ With a little imagination you know I could dismiss the Coronation and take it that this show of affection was all for my being twenty-one today .
4 They were several weeks journey from London , but towns like Liverpool or York were several days journey from London , so that the colonists might feel distant but not uniquely isolated from the metropolis , and had closer ties with it than many parts of the English countryside .
5 It does nothing useful , despite what you may think about screen saving , but it 's given me more entertainment watching it than any amount of television soaps — Johnny even celebrates major holidays at the right time ( assuming your PC 's clock is set correctly , of course ) .
6 cos I mean I get er talked about it and I know about it and that kind of thing and I that Darrel
7 But the Working Party did not need to dally with morbidity indicators , since ‘ the reasons for the pattern of differential Regional mortality are not wholly understood but it is believed that Regional differences in morbidity explain the greater part of it and that statistics of relative differences in Regional morbidity , if they existed , would exhibit the same pattern as those for mortality ’ ( DHSS , 1976b , p. 16 ) .
8 and you do bui plans of buildings on it and that sort of thing as well .
9 Yeah yeah and she 'd phone you up and see how you answered it and that sort of thing .
10 After the show , he said he would make me one and so I said that I would really like a sort of Gibson 355 , like BB was using in the mid-'60s and I would like my name on it and all sort of things .
11 In those days the washing was done in a good old copper boiling on a Monday and light the fire underneath it and this sort of thing .
12 There is perhaps one northeast of Flaxton Village , another south of it and another southeast of the A sixty four .
13 After the usual morning service but before the final blessing , the congregation leave the church and begin to walk round it until both ends of the procession are able to join up .
14 I was very much against it when that brother of hers wanted her to go .
15 She would have told Jacob about her new purpose , but she knew he would see it as another sign of her raving , a sign of some new imbalance , and would try to search for causes , try to talk her out of it .
16 ‘ Some people will see it as any number of cardinal sins , y'know , the diluting of dancehall at the hands of a wimpy white boy .
17 Many elderly people who are in need fail to apply for a supplementary pension or allowance , because they are inclined to regard it as some kind of charity ( a much maligned word ) — which of course it is not , and there should be no loss of pride or dignity for those who apply for it .
18 But to move to the other extreme and regard it as some kind of waste product was to endorse bourgeois correctionalism and , worse still , to acknowledge that the forces that were supposed to produce socialist consciousness could also produce something quite different .
19 He always thought of it as some kind of converted dungeon , but he sees now , with a wry smile , that it 's really just an ordinary suburban house .
20 She would inevitably interpret it as some kind of macho statement about the fact that even as he entertained one woman in his flat , another was on her way upstairs with … what on her mind ?
21 He 'd see it as some kind of betrayal , that I 'd allowed someone from outside to see that things are n't as perfect as they ought to be . ’
22 Unaware of how common this outburst of activity really is among housebound cats , they interpret it as some sort of abnormality and may even call in the vet to examine the animal .
23 A great deal of the blame must be laid at the feet of those who link regression with occult activities or treat it as some sort of parlour-trick to be practised for fun at parties .
24 I thought … look , I did n't mean it as some sort of slur on your character — there 's no crime in conceiving a child , for heavens sake ! ’
  Next page