Example sentences of "it [be] grant [prep] " in BNC.

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1 But God is generous , and it is granted to those who truly love him , and who have sought Christ beyond what men consider possible .
2 It is granted in respect of premises which are adapted and used for the provision of refreshments including food and non-alcoholic beverages for consumption on the premises , and which do not contain a bar counter .
3 So it is fair to say it was granted for intellectual activities .
4 It was granted for the following day and a deputation was formed consisting of Dr. Paisley , leader of the DUP ; Rev. William Beattie , deputy leader of the same party ; Cecil Harvey , Vanguard Unionist Assembly member from the Saintfield area ; and the present writer .
5 Begun in 1456 , it was granted to Thomas Sackville by Queen Elizabeth I. The house contains one of the most important collections of 17th century furniture in the world .
6 For the drift of the argument was essentially that men did not assume leadership , but that it was granted to them according to criteria which took merit and experience , as well as birth and social standing , into consideration .
7 Their Lancastrian sympathies had resulted in the forfeiture of their land early in the 1460s , when much of it was granted to Gloucester , but the de Veres had subsequently reached an accommodation with the new regime and had regained their land before Gloucester came of age .
8 Then , it was granted to a special breed of psychopath with a penchant for leather jackets and flared trousers .
9 At Brent in Somerset a piece of land was defined in the late seventh century when it was granted to Glastonbury Abbey .
10 Their Lancastrian sympathies had resulted in the forfeiture of their land early in the 1460s , when much of it was granted to Gloucester , but the de Veres had subsequently reached an accommodation with the new regime and had regained their land before Gloucester came of age .
11 However , it was granted on conditions of respectable behaviour not very different from those the Poor Law had been designed to induce .
12 But ‘ Commonwealth preference ’ was still important in the 1960s because it was granted on half the UK 's imports from Commonwealth countries .
13 R.10 enables the Council to revoke recognition where it was granted as a result of error or fraud .
14 failed to comply with a condition subject to which it was granted in that
15 In any event the ‘ Far East ’ solution depended , with rather specious simplicity , on the ability to separate communist sheep from nationalist goats and even though the distinction was recognized as the sine qua non of a solution , it assumed that those who would not support genuine independence , once it was granted by the French , would identify themselves as communists : and would thereby distinguish themselves from the rest of the ‘ nationalist elements ’ who comprised the major part of the resistance forces .
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