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

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1 " It got me tons of lifts on the way here .
2 Go on does n't it make you sort of bias when you actually work for the system ?
3 It offers you Europe 's most sophisticated cargo handling and distribution network .
4 It drives me nuts to see all the jobs that are out there to be done . ’
5 And precisely what distressed her about John 's outburst was that it once more put that distance between them ; it made them opposites sinner and sinned against , penitent and confessor , worm and angel .
6 It made them temptresses .
7 It caught me smack in the forehead and knocked me back three feet .
8 I think you will find that it owes it resiliency not to its form of organisation or administrative skills , but to the power of what we call beliefs and the appeal these beliefs have for its people . ’
9 It 's no wonder it bites you Ricky .
10 There 's some sort of board behind his head and a towel or something round his forehead holding his head upright but the eyes Christ the eyes there 's nothing there and McDunn says Persistent Vegetative State they call it apparently ; Persistent Vegetative State and it looks it man it looks it .
11 According to one of the skippers , each hunting trip cost on average over US$130 more than the crew received for the catch — the fishermen were simply carrying on a proud and noble tradition , even though it cost them money .
12 They set out to develop an empire and wage European wars at the same time , though their empire was unlike any of the others : it cost them money .
13 It cost me money though , I originally got her from a tutoring agency .
14 It cost me £58 and again is in excellent condition , and would have been double that price new .
15 It cost me £300 for insurance and shipping my MX-5 to Amsterdam on a roll-on ferry out of Brunswick , Georgia .
16 Including the gearbox , it cost him £1,000 .
17 By 1802 John Wayland — a member of a famous Frome family , some of whom were to be very eminent in Baptist circles in America — was the new owner , and rates on it cost him 4d. ; lucky old Mrs. Muir , then , who had taken over by 1804 , and was only charged half the price …
18 If you bet on horses or drink then it cost you money .
19 It cost us £50,000 to get Eva back , but I 'd spend it again if I had to . ’
20 We spent , it cost us double and we , then it was the same thing , same place , they were getting
21 It cost £2.5 billion and we got back £2 billion , which means that it cost us £500 million , which does not look to me like a profit .
22 Our first car was an ex-WD Austin 8 and it cost us £25 in 1957 .
23 Commander Abigail did n't even like the area : it caused him shame and guilt to consider it , he tried not to think about it .
24 It granted him strength and power so great that he would n't need his enabling potions .
25 it pull a bloody big just let it give yours paper have a little bit of
26 Yeah , but will it give you satisfaction to leave
27 And does it give you volume or not ?
28 Being on good terms with dischargers is essential for the field man to do his job efficiently : it allows him access to property whenever necessary , enabling him to carry out inspections , and to raise matters which might otherwise be sensitive .
29 It allows you flexibility while giving the work a strong sense of purpose and direction .
30 And it hurts me eyes
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