Example sentences of "what it [verb] " in BNC.
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1 | Microsoft Corp got a bloody nose when it went head-to-head with Novell Inc and challenged NetWare with LAN Manager , and what it failed to achieve with a full frontal attack , it is now trying to secure by stealth . |
2 | The voters , so far as you can judge from Greek opinion polls , would like to choose an economically responsible government in the coming election , and may even be willing to react responsibly to what it asks of them . |
3 | That 's what it boiled down to . ’ |
4 | Nor was it of much use to youth workers , as what it boiled down to was a couple of blocking techniques , a punch and a bite : a self-appointed , self-defence expert showing off . |
5 | What it boiled down to was : there was here , where he had friends and family , or there was London where he had a few friends and a lot of contacts , and it felt like things were happening , and where you could fill time with something no matter how mixed up and fraudulent you felt … or there was abroad , of course ; the rest of the world ; India ( to take the most extreme example he 'd found so far ) , where you felt like an alien , lumbering and self-conscious , materially far more rich and spiritually far more poor than the people who thronged the place , where just by that intensity of touching , that very sweating crowdedness , you felt more apart , more consigned to a different , echoing place inside yourself . |
6 | What it boiled down to was a question of priorities . |
7 | It has an overdraft of just over £1m , and its finance committee was told this week that , after hoarding trade-union and individual affiliations since 1987 , the party would have some £6m to spend in a May or June election — still much less than the Tories , but twice what it spent in the last election . |
8 | In statistical terms by far the best predictor of what an authority will spend this year is what it spent last year ( Danziger , 1978 ) . |
9 | Suddenly it was taking every atom of her will-power to stop that hand from doing what it longed to do — namely rise up and tangle with the silky black hair that curled so invitingly round Guido 's left ear . |
10 | Not only do we not enjoy what we eat ; in many instances we do not even notice what it tastes like . |
11 | ‘ You know what it tastes like ? ’ she asks dreamily . |
12 | That 's what it tastes of is n't it ? |
13 | Alternatively , the DGSE may have unofficially told MI6 what it planned to do in New Zealand . |
14 | Yet part of her aim is to ‘ invent a fictional language which will be as invisible , as transparent , as close as possible to what it speaks of ’ . |
15 | After years of urging its readers to embrace new technologies , New Scientist is practising what it preaches . |
16 | The tight control on public sector pay is crucial and underlines the fact that the Government intends to practise what it preaches . |
17 | In a world where few computer companies have been good computer users , IBM 's increasing tendency to practise what it preaches has helped maintain its advantage . |
18 | When he first reached the blissful shore of the redhead 's body , a peculiar idea occurred to him : he now knew at last what it meant to be absolutely modern ; it meant to lie on the shore of the redhead 's body . |
19 | White ceiling , white curtains shifting in a breeze , a huge bed neither would admit they had seen and what it meant . |
20 | And Niall got up and said , music to my ears , that Erin 's soil was n't green either but we all knew what it meant … |
21 | But the committee was hopelessly divided on what it meant by Christian hope — whether it was hope for peace and perfection in this world , or hope for a future life , or hope only of forgiveness at the last . |
22 | But the lessons he learned from those formative years were to stand him in good stead later on when he was to understand what it meant to be a director from first-hand experience . |
23 | What it meant in human terms was that black UK citizens excluded from their own country ( Britain ) were and still are being forced to live in countries where they have no right to live or work . |
24 | Television had brought golf to the working class and for just a moment television gave us an idea of what it meant to them . |
25 | When he read stories about Balder , Adonis and Bacchus , he was prepared to ‘ feel the myth as profound and suggestive of meanings beyond my grasp even tho ’ I could not say in cold prose ‘ what it meant ’ . |
26 | But what it meant to both of them was that all the money was frozen because there was a dispute over whose money was what and how much money had been spent — that was a problem for David and for Tony . |
27 | ‘ Over now , ’ Dot repeated , but she was n't sure what it meant and if she even wanted it over . |
28 | Dot had n't known what it meant . |
29 | For the sake of a quiet life he had given in to an unreasonable request and only now did he fully realize what it meant . |
30 | Intrigued , Mungo was about to ask his uncle what it meant when Stanley said : |