Example sentences of "it [be] [adv] that we [vb base] " in BNC.

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1 It 's just that we 've received soooooo many queries asking ‘ when ’ , ‘ who ’ and ‘ … how much ’ that we 've decided to give you the full story here ( maybe NOW you 'll stop inundating us with begging letters ! )
2 It 's just that we 've learnt to pay more attention to what we 're doing and use our budget wisely . ’
3 It 's just that we 've learnt to pay more attention to what we 're doing and use our budget wisely . ’
4 I do n't think it 's any worse now , it 's just that we 've written no about it .
5 Perhaps it 's just that we do n't have enough of those long , thin granite cracks .
6 It 's just that we do n't do it grammatically .
7 It 's just that we do n't want anything to ruffle the Khedive 's hair just when the negotiations are approaching a delicate stage . ’
8 They might have been done , it 's just that we do n't know .
9 I do n't Albert do n't mind going for her cigs , but it 's just that we do n't get up early in the morning , you know , and if me mum 's ringing at eight o'clock in the morning , 'cos she got no cigs .
10 Yeah , we can always get hold of them it 's just that we do n't carry them , we 're a small branch you see
11 It 's just that we do rather more sophisticated versions sometimes of very similar things which are done at school , but they might be done more precisely , simply in a rather more sophisticated way .
12 It 's just that we have to see the hearth if we 're to know you 're in an old farmhouse .
13 It 's just that we have n't got any resistance to the kind of germs they 're used to .
14 It 's just that we have a little surprise for you and we did n't want Mr Woodentop spoiling it . ’
15 It 's just that we have n't found it yet . ’
16 But I 'll have to be very careful with it I I do expect , I would expect , that there would be inquiries for that kind of investment here erm it 's just that we have n't any major ones in the last couple of years of that type because the overall framework here is opposed to it .
17 It 's just that we need to be absolutely sure before proceeding .
18 It 's just that we feel the human body can take so much and the English season is a long and punishing one as it it .
19 I think we have to be a little bit careful about this because , of course , erm the feeling is not that once they 've been in the job for a little while that they are still amateurs , it 's merely that we do n't require them to know a great deal about what they 're going to do before they start .
20 We look forward to an hour 's drive to an appointment , because it 's then that we dust off American Pie or Band On The Run or Led Zeppelin II or London Calling and snap it into our car 's entertainment system .
21 It 's basically that we feel the group has to be thrown into different circumstances if it 's going to be stimulated , if it 's going to change .
22 Yet , much that they wrote then resonates as much today : it is simply that we do not comprehend it .
23 Similarly , C. S. Lewis 's The Allegory of Love is praised by Kathleen Tillotson for charting the nature and evolution of two " principles " , or fundamental movements of the human mind — romantic love and allegory : " It is rarely that we meet with a work of literary criticism of such manifest and general importance as this . "
24 It is thus that we understand
25 And it is here that we come to the nub , theoretically , of the problem with Adorno 's whole approach to listening Dick Bradley ( n.d. ) points out that within a Marxist framework production and consumption can not properly be given the near-identity which Adorno attributes to them .
26 Yet it is here that we have to distinguish most clearly between a technical invention and a technology , and then further between a technology and its actual or possible social relations .
27 It is here that we do see examples of apparently selfless giving , where the carer 's independent life effectively is suspended for the duration of the caring relationship , which may last many years .
28 Guide to Kulchur gives us Pound at his most personal , at his most deliberately vulnerable ; it is here that we find him wondering aloud , for instance , if the body of his work to that date could be mentioned in the same breath with Thomas Hardy 's .
29 The London Daily Telegraph of 25 August 1887 , under the heading " A Sailors ' Association " chose to deal at length with the birth of the union , praising its objects , but predicting its early demise : " The North Country " , the article read , " was always the nursery of the famous and best seamen and it is here that we find Jack hard at work originating a fine scheme .
30 It is just that we do treat them as propositions which need no justification but which can justify others .
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