Example sentences of "it [adv] [verb] [noun sg] to " in BNC.

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1 It only requires behaviour to be broken down into some specifics , the equivalent of building blocks , and for those specifics to be cast into a coherent plan of action .
2 Also , the change in the potential difference phasor V over the infinitesimal element has been neglected in arriving at equation ( 9.74 ) since it only gives rise to terms that are second order in smallness .
3 The Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 does not apply to the 1984 Act as it only has application to common law duties and the statutory duty under the 1957 Act .
4 I have argued that correctionalism is no more inherently flawed than any other starting assumption ( including ‘ appreciation ’ ) that the alleged functions of crime are a myth , and that socialist anti-correctionalism is really nothing of the sort , but an argument about the nature of officially defined crime ( though it rightly draws attention to the fact that correctionalism can not justifiably avoid such an argument ) .
5 Iraqi possession of the islands would afford it greatly increased access to the Gulf .
6 Might n't it merely give rise to a new , psychologistic , feminist reductionism ?
7 It just added fuel to the fire .
8 The truss rod cover I do n't like particularly ; I ca n't say exactly why , but it just looks alien to the rest of the headstock and does n't fit too well on this example , either .
9 Those who gave evidence say the sentence is insufficient , they say it just gives licence to youngsters to break the law .
10 Those who gave evidence say the sentence is insufficient , they say it just gives licence to youngsters to break the law .
11 If this policy was genuine , it soon gave way to a much wider attack which meant that no religious order survived in England after 1540 .
12 It thus lends support to the materialistic view that it makes sense to think of objects in abstraction from a mind which perceives them .
13 ‘ Warn ’ is therefore used in a slightly unusual sense if that is the correct interpretation , since it usually connotes reference to a consequence that will arise in the event of non-compliance .
14 For reasons to be explained , the original legislation was found to be defective , and was amended in 1976 ( and placed into the legislative context of the Public Order Act 1936 ) , but even after amendment it still gave rise to complaints that it fell short of the aspirations of its promoters in its effects .
15 It still makes sense to ducks .
16 Like the first type , it always implies incidence to an actualizer of the infinitive event , someone or something which would have been explicitly expressed as the subject had the verb been finite .
17 It also plays host to a number of strange , ghostly occurrences according to a book I belong to Glasgow by Bill Hamilton and Gordon Carsely , from which I am most obliged for the information .
18 Not only a trade union , it also offered protection to those released from bonded labour , to the slumdwellers of Raipur , child labourers , farmers , women deserted or abused for the sake of dowry .
19 It also brought cheer to the giant Decca record company , which had set up Deram precisely to capture back from the new independent companies some of the money pumping into what there was of Britain 's counter culture .
20 If his work needs to be considered in the context of the contemporary politics of the Communist Party , as several commentators have stressed , it also requires reference to work done in the history of the sciences , particularly that of Gaston Bachelard in the history of physics and chemistry , his pupil Georges Canguilhem in the life sciences , and Jean Cavaillès in mathematics .
21 It also requires amendment to the Treaty of Rome .
22 But it also has relevance to the pro-active marketing of credit and , to my mind , nicely illustrates the crossroads the industry has reached and the opportunities that lie beyond it .
23 It also has access to the many years of experience on domestic credit underwriting in Holland from its parent company .
24 It also has regard to the fact that er some land will be lost to development which is taking place under the terms of policy I four .
25 It also means subscription to Foucaultian power/knowledge assumptions that are difficult to square with demands for modernist universalism .
26 It also provides access to many external information services .
27 It also provides advice to the Executive Chairman on remuneration and conditions of employment of senior executives .
28 It also facilitated access to the minority of Catholic policemen and women in the force , and , perhaps , was important in obtaining permission for the research from the police management , for it asserts their commitment to professionalism , an important part of which in Northern Ireland is religious impartiality .
29 The last time he called on us after his exhibition at Keighley he seemed a new man , with a delight in having found himself in his painting and amazement that it also gave pleasure to so many others .
30 But it also draws attention to another gap in the history of Keynesianism .
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