Example sentences of "if it [vb past] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The strikes ended on Jan. 23 , the day on which the government rushed legislation through the People 's Assembly enshrining the right to strike , but obliging workers to give 15 days ' notice of stoppages , and authorizing the Assembly to suspend a stoppage if it threatened the national interest .
2 A new drug could become a potential blockbuster if it treated a common ailment and generated $100m-plus in annual sales ( see table ) .
3 Its leaders knew there was a serious risk of trouble if it took a mass march into Gqozo 's lair .
4 The procedure , if it followed the usual course , would have been this : two doctors would be taken to see her and would ask her a few questions .
5 She screwed up her face at the name as if it left a nasty taste in her mouth , adding : ‘ Ca n't abide that man .
6 In 1976 the general tenor of the Report had gained a general welcome even if it secured no specific action to strengthen local independence .
7 The Whitbread brewing group was ruffled by stories it would be forced , under US legislation , to sell its US drink importing operations if it continued a trans-Atlantic restaurant build-up .
8 He had the sort of sensitive nose that made him instantly burst into tears if it got the slightest knock .
9 Adams ' report , one of a long line of studies , expert groups , advisory committees and internal and external task forces that have looked at Super-SARA , declared that the project was still viable if it got an immediate go-ahead .
10 The east could only overthrow colonialism if it formed a separate Colonial International to fight against it ( and , by implication , the working-class form of colonialism in the Communist party ) .
11 DARLINGTON Labour candidate Alan Milburn yesterday said his party would allow £8bn to be spent on council housing if it formed the next government .
12 The chimpanzee in the laboratory would be unlikely to solve the box-stick-and-banana problem if it had no initial interest in the bananas .
13 She cut another cross , wondering vaguely if it had a religious significance .
14 The difficulty from the outset was that the Treasury would only give approval for mandatory awards for DipHE students if it had a two ‘ A ’ level entry .
15 It 'd be really awkward having a name like that if it had a short neck . ’
16 For the present , in the daytime , he was abruptly fed up with the lot : himself , his insufficiency , the toll that his financial state seemed to be taking of his wife , and the colossally polite head of his stepson , hanging over him now as if it had a miniature keg of brandy around its neck .
17 There was something funny about it , as if it had a deliberate mistake you were supposed to spot or something .
18 It achieved this , he noted , by pretending to be injured , dragging itself along the ground as if it had a broken wing .
19 Yes I think if it had a few
20 if it had a few twists and curls round it and little things like that and bits of gold plate on it I mean that they 'd go for it , but er , because it 's made for its purpose and do n't want it .
21 Yeah but this this this dog will only drink it if it had a little bit of lemonade in .
22 ‘ Women and film ’ would make a great movie if it had an international , multicultural cast and would address all these questions at once .
23 They never changed the booth they sat in and they found that nobody was ever sitting in it as if it had an invisible reserved sign hanging above it .
24 If that were so then what I say would be true if it had the appropriate backing , false otherwise .
25 These findings offered important support for theoretical proposals about children 's acquisition of the meanings of more and less as well as of other adjective pairs ( e.g. , big/small , tall/short , wide/narrow ) , in that they appeared to show that children first learned the meaning of the unmarked term for a dimension ( e.g. , big , tall ) , and interpreted the marked ( negative ) member ( small , short ) of the pair as if it had the same meaning as the unmarked ( positive ) member ( see H. Clark , 1970 ; Clark , 1973a ) .
26 If it enabled the latter the crucial theoretical move of being able to reject the classical empiricist conception of knowledge , it was also to put him in the position of even castigating as ‘ historicist ’ any attempts to account for theoretical discourse in terms of its historical conditions of production — perhaps one of the major ways in which he differed from Canguilhem and Foucault .
27 There is little agreement on the ethics of recording without permission in situations like these , but Labov 's general principle seems to offer a sensible guideline ; it is that the researcher should ‘ avoid any act that would be embarrassing to explain if it became a public issue ’ ( Labov 1981 : 33 ) .
28 BRITAIN could face a decade of high unemployment if it became a full member of the European Monetary System without a sharp fall in the pound , according to a pressure group , the Campaign for Work .
29 BRITAIN could face a decade of high unemployment if it became a full member of the European Monetary System without a sharp fall in the pound , according to a pressure group , the Campaign for Work .
30 Until 1989 the courts had said that a 'speaking " decision could be upset if it contained an obvious error .
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