Example sentences of "it [vb -s] [prep] any [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The Act provided no definition of a ‘ public place ’ , but it refers to any place to which the public have access , irrespective of whether or not they have a legal right to go there , even when there are particular and restricted rules of entry .
2 The knowledge which it produces at any time is tentative and always open to challenge by further evidence .
3 The knowledge it produces at any time is tentative and always open to challenge by further evidence .
4 But the horizon no longer has any black skies , and it looks more forgiving than it has at any point until now .
5 Extend your answer to problem 1.6 so that it deals with any number of input devices .
6 It applies to any structure , physical and sensual .
7 It applies to any profession regulated in some way by the state ( or by chartered professional associations , as is the case with many in the UK ) for which at least three years ' education and training at university or equivalent level are required .
8 Because of the other legislative provisions dealing with repayment of various taxes it seems in any event that the number of cases where any principle of common law would need to be relied on is likely to be small .
9 Because there are so many variables in the equation , it is inevitable that management has some discretion as to how much weight it attaches to any point in a particular case .
10 it relates to any transaction ( actual or contemplated ) involving the company with which the insider is connected and the other company , or involving one of them and the securities of the other , or to the fact that any such transaction is no longer contemplated .
11 Play is usually defined as any activity engaged in for the enjoyment it gives without any consideration of the end result .
12 It works with any phone in the press , but it 's quite limited .
13 But of course the thing about it is that it works for any shape .
14 The second and more important point is that the general argument against behaviouristic theories does take in functionalism and is not merely directed against traditional behaviourism : it works against any theory that analyses one 's conception of the world simply in terms of the way one functions — that is , behaves — in the world .
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