Example sentences of "it [verb] [adj] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 So get it to go all the way .
2 This disease , it like , it destroys all the brain cells , you know
3 It goes all the way to Kyle of Lochalsh these days turning southwards from Achnasheen , leaving the wild vastness of Wester Ross accessible only by the motor car , a later and more threatening penetration .
4 Teacher : Yes , it goes all the way round the log now .
5 I suppose it goes all the way round does it ?
6 It laid bare the dynamics of the transformation overcoming the Empire .
7 According to its prospectus , it intended to apply for an Act of Parliament empowering it to acquire all the land south of Downing Street , as far as Parliament Square , between St James 's Park and the river .
8 OK they 're quite happy for their girls to be academic but daring to be more positive about being ordered outside that because it involves such a lot , having control over your own body , again you know , abortion raises its hairy head again .
9 It involves such a lot .
10 When Tom produced a half-firkin of ale , saved from his own wedding , it became apparent the celebration was going to carry on far into the night .
11 The collegial atmosphere of the symposium was strained as it became apparent the Japanese and Americans regard the Indian team as reckless , the Indians feel Japanese criticisms are groundless , and the Americans advocate a policy that would leave the site a partial ruin , while others urge comprehensive repairs and reconstruction .
12 Trouble flared a few days before MacQuillan 's death , when it became apparent the inventor was in effect conducting an auction and the price of buying the securely patented new carton had shot alarmingly high .
13 It became such a success that further developments were needed .
14 It became redundant a couple of years ago when the Chipmunk glider tug it was providing spares for was replaced by a Piper Pawnee .
15 However , the growth of the Catholic population was such that it became clear the Diocese of Beverley which comprised the whole of Yorkshire needed to be divided .
16 The two-year row has been rumbling on since it became clear the Ffestiniog Company had taken an interest in the project .
17 THE South West Thames regional health authority requested the army be drafted in for ambulance work when it became clear the police could not cope , according to ambulance mangement .
18 Soon it became clear the prospecting company was trying to suppress its excitement .
19 Mr MacAskill commented : ‘ It became clear the vote was a confidence issue in the party convener and I felt it was no longer appropriate that I should remain in his cabinet . ’
20 The scale of the problems facing Mr Major worsened yesterday as it became clear the Danes want even more concessions over Maastricht .
21 In November 1914 at the Annual General Meeting , it became clear the Club had to abort some costly schemes and , although not blaming the war , it must have been the cause .
22 Years ago it housed all the village activities including lantern slides , then moving pictures when they came into being .
23 The inflation was also a good thing in that it produced all the contents of the universe quite literally out of nothing .
24 It encapsulated all the preoccupations and fantasies of the provincial adolescent .
25 A freshly bought loaf , still warm from the oven , smells and tastes delicious — but we would not expect it to taste good a week later .
26 This principle is not the special prerogative of anthropology , and it transcends all the boundaries of traditional academic disciplines .
27 With 12 players on call from the World Cup compared to the USA 's six , Canada could rely on experience and it made all the difference , especially among the backs where the Eagles paid a heavy price for dropped passes , missed tackles and errant kicks .
28 For the first time Janine felt that she had an ally , and it made all the difference to her .
29 In practice , at least in South-East Asia , it made all the difference whether aid was given before or after independence .
30 By purporting to de-interpret them by removing the excrescences of later interpretations it made possible a reinterpretation which allowed mythology to be seen again as something that while still existing on the level of the most civilized and polished communication kept speaking of what it had sprung from — men 's basic needs and desires .
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