Example sentences of "to [art] [noun pl] it " in BNC.

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1 In the case of exercise it appears that the body becomes addicted to the endorphins it produces to ameliorate the pain and stress .
2 Historically , the rural railway line brought life to the areas it served .
3 To Western eyes this method seemed restricted and undemocratic , but to the Soviets it was considered an orderly method of proceeding compared to the apparent chaos of Western politics .
4 It was less passive and more assertive , determined to hold on to the powers it had reclaimed from the executive in both foreign and domestic policy .
5 If the linguistic side of our University Schools of English could be persuaded to give rather less of their attention to the roots of the English language and to devote more of it to the leaves it has put forth so abundantly since 1500 there would be far more data for literary scholars like Mr. Bateson to work upon .
6 We shall not rest until the government of Britain fully belongs to the citizens it is there to serve .
7 Onassis called the island a heaven on earth , but to the Royals it was just a huge playground .
8 Sport does occupy a great chunk of the time of black schoolkids and the attention they give it is directly related to the rewards it brings .
9 However , the main arguments for Quattro Pro for Windows relate to the functions it offers .
10 And a large part of what it was teaching to the Germans it had learned from the Romans .
11 Despite the proximity to the suburbs it is completely rural in character , with a golf course to one side , open fields on the other , and extensive views north across the Forth valley .
12 The hot water-cylinder should certainly be as near as possible to the boiler — preferably vertically above it — and to the taps it serves .
13 In recent years it has added to the services it provides for the retired to include financial services , retirement homes and magazine publishing .
14 In the old villa the labour force had consisted mainly of serfs , or villeins , who were personally free but were tied to the plot of land on which they lived , and to the services it traditionally rendered to the lord , and of slaves , who had no freedom and no land .
15 Applying these five criteria to the documents it is possible to distinguish reasonably enough between three types of significance which can best be considered separately .
16 But the NEC said that all the associations had performed poorly in relation to the criteria it had set for them .
17 ‘ There is no doubt that the risks of taking HRT are relatively much fewer in comparison to the benefits it provides . ’
18 To the town-planners it was obvious that the new boulevard served no purpose .
19 6 Light Full right of liberty at any time after the date of this Lease to alter or to erect new structures within or adjoining the Centre ( such expression here excluding the Premises ) in such manner as the Landlord shall think fit notwithstanding the fact that the same may obstruct affect or interfere with the amenity of or access to the Premises or the passage of light and air to the Premises It may be as well to include the words in parenthesis to remove any suggestion that the landlord may have the right to alter the premises .
20 In conclusion , according to the papers it 's women who are the problem , not men .
21 The material being of humans ( their location in the mode of production ) determines their consciousness ( the ideologies they absorb ) but the process of determination does not extend to the particular content of ideology , rather to the forms it takes ( philosophy , religion , law , politics , aesthetics , intellectual production in general ) .
22 So these people that had little private shops in them days did well because when the people came to the lodges it all the commodities were bought to as well as them .
23 Second , governments need to apply financial instruments to the materials society uses rather than to the wastes it creates .
24 Compared to the others it was expensive and dirty , with poor lighting and poor security .
25 Although Kemira is not completely home and dry , the EC will find it virtually impossible not to find a solution to the problems it has recognised .
26 Although Kemira is not completely home and dry , the EC will find it virtually impossible not to find a solution to the problems it has recognised .
27 Although Kemira is not completely home and dry , the EC will find it virtually impossible not to find a solution to the problems it has recognised .
28 The ordinary person does not inherently dislike work : according to the conditions it may be a source of satisfaction or punishment .
29 ‘ The artistic heritage of Rome and Lazio is so vast and imposing that we distribute the work between us , even if according to the rules it is the Soprintendenza for Architectural Monuments which should deal with mural painting ’ .
30 To the locals it was a wilderness they would rather have preserved for the hawks , the salmon and the mountaineers .
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