Example sentences of "it [adv] [verb] [adj -er] " in BNC.

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1 Rasbora caudimaculata the Red Scissortail can be a trickly fish to acclimatise to aquarium life , but once well established it rarely gives further problems .
2 Since then , it daily becomes clearer to more and more people that Green issues must now be taken seriously , especially in Planning and Environmental matters .
3 We push his legs but they buckle at the knees , so we have to hold them up above our heads as we push to make them stay straight , then as we shove and his trousers are rolled down by the rim of stone , his arms flop over the far side of the shaft rim and it suddenly gets easier to push him .
4 There is nothing exceptional in this : it merely reinforces earlier Library Association statements on the responsibilities of the professional librarian with regard to censorship .
5 It just seemed easier to let everyone assume that at the time … ’
6 I see it happen but wait , hoping that as usual she will jump out from it , but it just gets worse and she slows almost to a stop .
7 Yeah I definitely think she ought to have have a check up better to have a check you and it be nothing , than just keep hanging on saying it 'll go away and it does n't , it just gets worse .
8 And , and so what happens is th the whole thing just keep , it 's just compounded worser , it just gets worse and worse and worse and worse .
9 But as time goes by it just gets harder .
10 After that , it just got worse .
11 And it just got worse and worse .
12 Then it just got worse and worse .
13 ‘ Despite several rests ranging from a few days up to a whole week , I could n't shake off the injury and it just got worse .
14 do what , it just seems easier for you that 's all
15 Since a good deal of writing is context-establishing in this way , it generally reveals higher levels of lexical density than does , for example , spoken conversation , which tends to be context-identifying , concerned with giving the sharper indexical focus to shared lexical information which form-words can provide .
16 It thus provides lower cost loans by operating with narrower interest rate margins than those of domestic banking operations .
17 It usually sees lower-valued , female psychologists , in particular , simply in terms of their sex .
18 " I ca n't imagine it possibly looking better . "
19 As she watched , it rapidly grew fainter and fainter .
20 The root or body of the tree is the finest lead , from which , it gradually becomes worse , as it approaches the extremities of the branches . ’
21 I did as I was told and flopped down on a chair , but it gradually got worse and worse , and I felt as if I was going to be sick .
22 it gradually got worse .
23 At the same time , even when the circuit performs better at some loudspeaker impedances than the traditional Class B circuit , it still has worse performance than that of Class S because of the low , yet varying impedance seen by the main voltage amplifier for all loudspeaker impedances bar one .
24 But it always seemed better once I had got the anger out of my system . "
25 I quickened my step to reach the quieter part of the hall , where it always seemed darker .
26 It always gets worse towards the end .
27 And it always tastes better when you dinna have to pay . ’
28 It always looked better from a distance , and by the 1960s it was a tatty , faded and unkempt relic of another age — impractical as an exhibition centre compared to functional establishments like Wembley or Earl 's Court , unappealing to any hippy entrepreneur or maverick Recreations Department dreamer who might have visualised some cultural cathedral or fun palace .
29 because it always looks smarter than , like this just plain
30 As the population becomes older , it also becomes wealthier and I draw the hon. Gentleman 's attention to the fact that the average pensioner has increased his or her income by 33 per cent .
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