Example sentences of "[prep] [art] [adj] [noun sg] [conj] it " in BNC.

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1 For example , the SSD does n't fund any voluntary groups for the African community and it is less accessible for us ’ .
2 Labelling can be a nightmare for the behavioural analyst because it can divert attention away from the real problems .
3 With their many variants and subdivisions they provide a wonderfully expressive earful for the alert feline as it goes about its business .
4 The HGT-1 cell line was isolated from a human gastric adenocarcinoma , and can not be considered a complete model for the parietal cell as it does not secrete hydrochloric acid .
5 The temptation to say the coin caused the bar to come out can be explained by seeing it for the ordinary cause that it was , and of what event it was the cause , and of what nearby event it was not the cause .
6 These restrictions , which dated from a congressional amendment to the US 1974 Trade Reform Act , effectively precluded most-favoured-nation ( MFN ) trading status for the Soviet Union unless it agreed to relax restrictions on Jewish emigration .
7 She seems to confuse the royal family with God — capital letters surge across her pages , even for the definite article when it 's in proximity with royalty — as in ‘ The Queen and The Prince ’ .
8 He buys a hugely expensive house for the sole reason that it has a view over the bay of a winking green light from Daisy 's house .
9 This has had such far reaching implications for the Western world that it deserves mention here .
10 We pray for the general synod as it meets shortly , for wise decisions and clear leadership .
11 And Rover is right : by no stretch of the imagination could it be called a replacement for the dogged Montego because it competes in a different class .
12 That realisation is a product of the power of rational thought which came to the emerging ‘ human' ’ being in the course of the evolutionary process , for it is in remote retrospect that man can now see that the division of the first cell was a ‘ good ’ event , and had to be defined as such for the unanswerable reason that it could not have been anything else , otherwise there was nothing that could be defined as the origin of ‘ good ’ that was not dependent on dogma and superstition .
13 Michael went with her to meetings and joined her when she worked for the Liberal cause because it was the next best thing to Labour .
14 The indium-111 leukocyte technique is particularly suitable for the present study since it utilises the homing properties of neutrophils in response to specific chemoattractants .
15 It is clear that local government promises to be an even worse headache for the new government than it was for the old .
16 A ‘ good ’ book needs to have meaning for the individual reader and it must bring meaning to what is experienced in our daily lives .
17 Furthermore , he contests , costs at the company have gone up for the simple reason that it has moved into different areas of activity — IBM simply made the mistake of trying to be ‘ all things to all people ’ , and so will never be able to return to the profit levels of the mid-1980s .
18 I nearly always start to make the chair at the back seat rail , for the simple reason that it is usually , but not always , the component that has right-angled joints , even when every other part of the chair is angled or curved .
19 The process did n't perturb him for the simple reason that it did n't repel Willie .
20 Hume 's argument , however , does not hold water for the simple reason that it assumes that the question of the possibility of significantly ascribing identity to objects as ontological existents can and should be decided via an analysis of the conditions of their identification , whereas the simple fact is that the concept of an entity as a potential topic of discourse is analytically linked with , and hence inseparable from , that of identity .
21 I can not simply advise you to go out and buy without trying for the simple reason that it can be very slow on anything less than a really fast machine .
22 Until the parties have identified the goods which the buyer is to have , no property can pass from the seller to the buyer for the simple reason that it is impossible to tell in which goods the property is passing .
23 For once I did n't take my beloved camera with me to record the state of the line , for the simple reason that it results in very slow progress , and that is hardly wise near the shortest day of the year .
24 I merely hope that I will not be a Charles talking about the fire cover again for today and er perhaps in future times for the simple reason that it is one thing to make a budget , it is one thing to do a .
25 Correct two points Hungary had no navy for the simple reason that it did not and does not have a sea .
26 This essay is , incidentally , unusually accessible for the lay reader as it does not rely on any familiarity with the technical terminology that he developed later .
27 We can wonder to what extent McGregor 's Theory X is appropriate for the modern organisation since it implies direction and control through a centralised system of organisational structure .
28 For all its faults , it can at least be said for the modern world that it has produced a substantial body of articulate opinion that blends passion with compassion in its concern for the impoverished and starving peoples of the world .
29 The money he gave them they had meant to use for the Greek trip but it was more than they expected and they had gone on a shopping , then a drinking , spree with it .
30 Mr Wigley said the company 's banking facilties are sufficient to support activities for the forseeable future while it strives to reduce debt further until rental and retail income covers interest costs and overheads .
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