Example sentences of "it [vb -s] [conj] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | It agrees that compulsory treatment in the community is unacceptable , but accepts that the ‘ revolving door ’ patient who regularly defaults from treatment presents a genuine problem of management . |
2 | It does not stipulate that the defendant has a right to win a lawsuit whenever and just because the plaintiff does not : it insists that neither side may have a right to win . |
3 | It insists that all research is totally impartial to give readers objective facts about products and services . |
4 | Though the Bank has accepted the report 's findings , it insists that continued support for the project is justified . |
5 | Nevertheless it insists that legal practice as a whole can be seen as organized around important legal conventions and this claim requires showing that the behaviour of judges generally , even those who are not conventionalists , converges sufficiently to allow us to find convention in that convergence . |
6 | It decrees that intelligent life in some way selects out its own actual universe from a variety of possible alternatives . |
7 | Citalia prices itself on the unrivalled choice of accommodation it offers and this year the range is even further expanded with the addition of 60 new hotels . |
8 | It supposes that this practice will serve the community better-bring it closer to what really is a fair and just and happy society — than any alternative program that demands consistency with decisions already made by other judges or by the legislature . |
9 | If , as a result of its inquiries under s47 , it concludes that certain action should be taken to safeguard or promote a child 's welfare it must take that action so far as it is both within its power and reasonably practicable for it to do so ( s47(8) ) . |
10 | It concludes that British Coal should be able to compete with the price of imported coal while continuing to improve safety standards . |
11 | It concludes that intensive analysis of individual schools and classrooms is required . |
12 | The London Industrial Strategy ( Greater London Council , 1985 ) highlights some of these problems , and although it argues for a positive role for local authorities , in the end it concludes that national help and assistance will be necessary in order to have any major impact . |
13 | It concludes that damaging levels of sulphur are deposited on 75 per cent of all European forestry , with the most severe impact occurring in those eastern countries which were once communist . |
14 | ‘ It looks like different rules apply . |
15 | If those , all of those contract temps are regarded as full time people it looks like full time people are working overtime , which is why I asked you the question yesterday erm what 's the overtime bill for quotes alone . |
16 | When the cat enters the room and looks around , it notices that several people are staring at it . |
17 | It starts when tiny food particles cling to your teeth and are surrounded by bacteria — this triggers the chemical process , which dissolves the tooth crystal and culminates in the destruction of the enamel . |
18 | It contains and excellent article about Pat Keen and her classes , a splendid photo of Pat herself and the observation — accurate indeed — that she looked years younger than her age . |
19 | a ‘ cross-curricular ’ view focuses on the school : it emphasises that all teachers ( of English and of other subjects ) have a responsibility to help children with the language demands of different subjects on the school curriculum : otherwise areas of the curriculum may be closed to them . |
20 | Thus for Schrödinger 's cat there is one world in which it lives and another world in which it dies . |
21 | Now why I mean do you think it matters that these things are so that these things are so , that these things which we thought were in , you know private to you , and not available to other people so easily , why do you think it matters that they actually are apparently in return for mo payment , are available to anyone ? |
22 | It matters because this layer absorbs all ultraviolet C and a proportion of ultraviolet B from sunlight before it reaches the earth 's surface . |
23 | And Freud 's answer is that it matters because human beings have inherited this guilt from the primal crime . |
24 | First , it allows that many kinds of circumstances can contribute to the course of events , and secondly it enables us to understand how these may combine to bring about dramatic and unexpected social changes which Althusser calls ‘ ruptures ’ . |
25 | It allows that some definitions will be of greater ‘ priority and intensity ’ than others and this has been taken to imply that the definitions will differ in their subjective interpretation by those who receive them ( see Taylor , Walton and Young , 1973 ) . |
26 | Oakhurst , California-based Sierra On-Line Inc has cut its staff by about 10% and will take a $900,000 charge to cover the costs ; it warns that fourth quarter losses will be substantially greater than expected , based on current revenue projections at the Sierra Network combined with the lay-off charges . |
27 | In practice it occurs when deaf children can write a word better than speak it . |
28 | It has been suggested that it occurs when susceptible individuals do not get enough natural light during the winter months . |
29 | ( 4 ) It happens that many systems of equations , particularly those of some physical relevance , have simple behaviour for extreme values of a parameter . |
30 | A final point that has to be borne in mind is that in order to make generalizations based on the type of quantitative analysis pioneered by Labov , a large number of tokens must be analysed ( usually thousands ) ; however , it happens that some variables that are quite salient in the community occur relatively rarely , and so we can not make reliable quantitative statements about these covering the range of speaker variables , even though they may be involved in linguistic change and may be important for historical projections on to earlier English . |