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

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1 The thought was ( and is ) unnerving , and it illustrates how close realism sits to radical analysis , how misplaced the critical stricture that it is merely cosy .
2 The following list of aesthetic compromises is by no means complete , but it illustrates how early recording artists had to adapt .
3 Although the case did not succeed , it illustrates how American lawyers will contrive to have civil cases arising from aircraft accidents anywhere in the world heard in a US court .
4 Toni : ‘ It depends how important femininity is to them .
5 Does it matter how close children get to their work ?
6 It shows how good Batts is because normally Dalglish makes one offer — if its rejected he drops out altogether .
7 It shows how good Batts is because normally Dalglish makes one offer — if its rejected he drops out altogether .
8 It shows how serial killers do n't have two heads .
9 One of this book 's merits is that it shows how hard stone application was not confined to the Baroque , and includes unexpected nineteenth-century examples .
10 The advantage of this formal approach to organisations is that it shows how organisational objectives can be reached by :
11 It reveals how close U2 can come to being a straightforward rock group — one of those ! — and simultaneously how far they can move away from that .
12 It showed how local government could benefit from the efficiency of a larger authority while also being responsive to local communities in delivering its services .
13 That is to say , a system could not be cognisant unless it appreciated how intentional changes in its perceptions were constrained by reality .
14 Until a couple of days before the price was announced Warburg was working towards a Fr70 price , and only pushed this up to Fr72 ( 707p ) when it saw how strong demand was .
15 It tells how essential God 's presence is in making our lives rich and meaningful and bemoans the fact that so many people turn away from him .
16 it proves how desperate people get and then he treats them like animals and this boy said I think
17 The colour of his face always reddens just as it does when fat Margot , the launderess , who keeps me supplied with cups of sack , bends and dips to provide me with a generous view of the most famous cleavage in all of Surrey . )
18 They say lightning never strikes twice but it does when old Shallot 's around .
19 The genealogical framework was the narrative , and it was essentially unconnected with any particular time : it was a sequence which had to be in the right order , and it explained how living people and the loyalties which linked them , came to be .
20 It demonstrates how Conservative administrations in the 1980s have been determined to reduce public expenditure and to ensure that support is ultimately dependent on central-government approval — a constant theme in inner-urban policy , which later chapters explore .
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