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

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1 Rather , it invents a sort of simplified version of the training set : When the net has finished learning , the nodes in it form clusters of just a few points which each reflect much larger clusters in the training set .
2 Bull said it still continues to be part of ACE Consortium , but only as far as desktop Intel-based systems are concerned : it refused to be drawn over the question of whether its relationship with IBM would result in it favouring OS/2 over Windows 3 , saying only that ‘ Windows is what our customers are buying today ’ .
3 ‘ At the end of the day all of us are in it to sell records .
4 She had one made out of ice … with ROOMS in it to keep prisoners in .
5 In other words , it 's not an employment location , it is primarily a residential new settlement development which has some employment in it to satisfy employment needs of those who live there .
6 in It starts September the twentieth
7 potato in it do potato on the side
8 Ray Floyd , having dumped his ball in it to help Faldo to the second of his titles , would not deem it so .
9 I do n't think they 're in it to make zillions and zillions of pounds , I think they 're in it to make great records .
10 The world and everything in it shows signs of order and pattern , but such signs are inexplicable without the mind of a Planner .
11 However , of much more concern to Blythen Jenkins , head of corporate affairs with the IoD , is the tendency ‘ in all legislation where the liability of the company is involved , such as environmental or consumer protection , to have a little paragraph in it saying liability shall be assumed by the directors and officers of the company ’ .
12 But the most obvious fact about the social world is that what happens in it has meaning for the inhabitants .
13 Cavendish 's second cousin , and comprises twenty-eight compositions : fourteen songs for voice and lute or two voices and bass viol , six more lute songs with alternative versions for four voices alone , and eight madrigals for five voices — a range of performing options which justifies the claim in the dedication that the book ‘ hath in it humours variable for delights sake ’ .
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