Example sentences of "[pron] [vb -s] it [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I needs it for a wager on the Brasseywing . ’
2 On the new LP it will say something like ‘ Free samples if someone uses it in a really creative way . ’
3 Last girl to leave turns it off at night , then I puts it on next morning .
4 The Labour Department can cajole companies to break the ceiling themselves before someone does it for them .
5 Even if no mining had been carried out , the courts decided , the owners of the mineral rights still had a valid claim to the coal , and in seeking to deny them this , the government was violating the Fifth Amendment , which prohibits it from taking property without just compensation .
6 The top is quickly reached from the grassy nick which separates it from the nearby Roaches .
7 And although the er , the causal relationship is not completely established , it is a very helpful way of remembering that one of the principle distinguishing features of this organism which separates it from other members of the genus staphylococcus it pr it produces this enzyme to coagulate things on and the effects of this enzyme are illustrated here as against the control preparation , you see a clot form due to the action of this enzyme on clotting practice which has been put into this test tube serum .
8 The stream may be followed down the field to a lateral path which crosses it by yet another God 's Bridge , a stone arch formed by nature .
9 A real state consists of a naive state and a sequence of naive operations which produces it from the naive start state .
10 Though Heineken is the favourite , Whitbread could do a deal with Belgian group Interbrew , which supplies it with Stella Artois lager .
11 This state coercion ( the removal of grain surpluses , tax in kind , or some other form ) is economically funded : in the first place , directly , since the peasantry itself has an interest in the growth of industry , which supplies it with agricultural machines , implements , artificial fertilisers and electric power , etc. ; in the second place , indirectly , since the state power of the proletariat is the best means of protection against the restoration of the economic pressure of the large-scale landowner , banker …
12 Some guys are n't going to be able to walk for a week — they 've got tattered feet , but er nobody begrudges it , nobody begrudges it at all .
13 The ‘ Histoire ’ of Bataille 's title has been appropriated by the female voice which turns it into ‘ hystery ’ — a ‘ bad copy ’ of the original , and an enigmatic , repressed female story , a mystery .
14 ( He gets up and ‘ accidently ’ scratches the record — which knocks it on the head for Vixen — and me , since we are reviewing the singles on the editor 's stereo . )
15 The water soaks into the ground and becomes sucked in to a sandstone strata , which holds it like a sponge under the city .
16 As James Tobin pointed out in his comments on the Coen and Hickman paper , a feature of their approach which exposes it to criticism from those macroeconomists who accept some variant of the NAIRU hypothesis is that it lacks a coherent explanation of the relationship between unemployment , be it Keynesian , classical or some mixture of the two , and inflation .
17 But , as a risk to safety taken recklessly , the offence deserves a penalty which places it above many intentional offences against property .
18 This model confirms the importance of the greenhouse gas forcing of the climate , but it suggests that a doubling of greenhouse gas concentration will produce an increase in surface air temperature of 1.6 + 0.3 °C , which places it in the lower range of the generally accepted predictions of temperature increase ( Gilliland and Schneider , 1984 ) .
19 But if the master has made him a bailee of them so as to vest him with exclusive possession , then , like any other bailee of this sort , he has it ; so , too , if goods are delivered to him to hand to his master , he has possession of them until he has done some act which transfers it to his master , e.g .
20 Metal lends itself to a wider range of decorative techniques than most other materials because of its physical properties , particularly its ductility , which allows it to be twisted into wire or inlaid with other metals and even other materials such as gemstones .
21 At the back there is a horizontal belt sleeve which allows it to be attached to a belt up to 70mm wide and there is also a vertical sleeve 50mm wide which permits it to be worn on its side or slid down over a vertical post for use as a permanent fixture at a centre or clubhouse .
22 The Microlog has a simple system which allows it to be attached quickly to the pushpit .
23 It is the fact of being the written form which establishes it as the standard .
24 ‘ Acid rain can be abatted by taking the sulphur from power station flue gases , using the Wellman-Lord process , which extracts it as sulphuric acid .
25 the smoking of tobacco will reduce the money supply in a society which uses it as a medium of exchange .
26 Somebody uses it for boozing sessions . ’
27 It would be foolish to make a strong claim about the salience of the JC STRUT vowel for LE speakers on the strength of limited data like this , but it does appear that for some speakers , this point of difference between LE and JC falls below a " salience threshold " which leads it to be ignored for adaptation purposes , while for other speakers it is salient enough to be adapted , but not consistently .
28 Solid and secret behind a high stone wall it remains a world apart from the crawling traffic which skirts it on the routes out of town .
29 Indeed the pressure for change is not something which batters the conservative position from outside , it is a worm which undermines it from within .
30 Cole writes as a proponent of British Empirical Socialism : that is to say , of that view of Socialism which sees it as state , or municipal , ownership of industry and the planned economy , but as preserving political freedom and democracy in the western , liberal tradition .
  Next page