Example sentences of "it take the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It does n't hurt because it 's pulled off so quickly , and when we pull it off , we put our finger straight over the area and it takes the sting away .
2 So it goes south to Gath , but it takes the plague with it , together with an unearthly confusion and terror .
3 And you can have an M O T certificate , they like you to book for those cos it takes the nurse quite a time to do you .
4 But , most of all , it takes the will of people like you who care about whales and dolphins to make it happen .
5 As a result Taos is object-oriented at a very fine level and it takes the idea of dynamic linking to its logical conclusion .
6 As a result Taos is object-oriented at a very fine level and it takes the idea of dynamic linking to its logical conclusion .
7 In particular , it takes the HSE to task for not taking the problem of sick building syndrome seriously .
8 As long as it takes the child to cease movement .
9 It takes the name from the Ottringham beacon , a radar transmitter on the outskirts of the village which is a vital communication link for all civil and military aircraft .
10 It takes the way things go instead of just making , yeah , instead of just sitting down and getting on with it .
11 As a feminist I did n't invert their bad habits by only talking to women — this book is about women and men , though it takes the standpoint of women as its reference point .
12 It takes the shortfall for the year to date to £19.3billion and the annual total will easily top the £20billion forecast by the Chancellor , Mr John Major , in his autumn expenditure statement .
13 They are a little smaller , club-shaped and covered with a shiny brown fluid which neither hardens nor evaporates , but remains liquid for the three or four weeks it takes the eggs higher up the twig to hatch .
14 King cobras curl around their pile of eggs , encircling it with their coils , and crocodiles stay alongside their nest of decaying vegetation for the two months or so that it takes the eggs within to hatch .
15 The mountain is seen from the west as a massive dome ringed by cliffs ; from the east , it takes the shape of a slender pinnacle .
16 And it takes the stains out of no , can it not get paint stains ?
17 As Fergus Campbell has suggested , if the ERP can tell us whether or not the subject has seen a light , it takes the psycho out of psychophysics .
18 wants to be a success , it did , it takes the subsidy away from
19 That 's a look we 'll see emerging from the dull , old chrysalis that was Renault design in the '70s and '80s , when it takes the wraps off its first really new-age car in two years ' time .
20 She added , ‘ It takes the skill and discipline of the straight actor to create the funny man .
21 ‘ When you body starts to heal , they ca n't breathe , so they release a chemical which makes you itch ; when you scratch , it takes the scab off the wound so they can breathe again .
22 In deciding the second of tests posed by the court in Waterfield , the court will consider not merely whether or not the power exists , but whether it has been properly exercised , and hold that , if the manner in which an admitted power is exercised is improper , it takes the constable outside the execution of his duty again .
23 Rather than concerning itself with the way in which the properties of this structure emerge from its components , it takes the structure as given and asks how it reproduces itself and changes .
24 Children will enjoy seeing the chaos as Henry leads all the young animals out into the forest , where it takes the farmer a long time to catch them .
25 It is usually possible to read subtitles in less time than it takes the characters to complete the exchange .
26 It takes the pleasure right out of it , so it does , ’ Winnie said .
27 It takes the cyberpunk circus routines of Archaos and gives then a high-tech edge .
28 Once again this is wrong , clearly so : ‘ It is a ‘ scam ’ on such a scale it takes the breath away . ’
29 It takes the action of the whole of The Lord of the Rings to make these ring true and there is a vein of proverbial wisdom ( about God being on the side of the big battalions ) which would utterly deny them .
30 It takes the railway line into the city 's Central Station , itself a notable piece of railway building , designed by John Dobson , the architect who was responsible for so much of Newcastle 's new central stylishness in the nineteenth century .
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