Example sentences of "[adv prt] [conj] it [adv] " in BNC.

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1 It took a few days for the butis to decide to employ me , since I clearly was not about to join the Community , but I kept coming back and mucking in and it just sort of happened .
2 What I 'll do is I 'll read you the first paragraph of rule six and actually bend the rule and put those words in and it really does n't make any sense at all , so listen carefully on this one and do n't be surprised if you do n't understand me .
3 And you get your fork in and it really is hard .
4 It all went down and it immediately flooded her with warmth .
5 Other than that it 's good to see a company producing a cheap guitar which not only looks convincingly like a no-nonsense , top-of-the-range instrument , but wo n't let the side down if it actually has to earn its keep .
6 He leaned backwards , his hair hanging down until it nearly touched the floor .
7 Ultimately , they said , it broke down because it simply could not deliver the goods .
8 But it was sort of let me think it was over and it only looked about that big .
9 We just , I mean I just started I 'd I was ironing or something and I turned it over and it so I
10 The Company struggled on until it finally closed in 1939 .
11 and the next night he 'll be kipping and the other one I 'll be working and that 's how they used to go on and it eventually , that 's why it was ten English worker 's to one Japanese because of that reason
12 He would say he 'd sent one off but it probably would n't arrive for months , you know what they do with holiday mail , fly it out to sea and drop it in .
13 I tried to turn the tap off but it still dripped .
14 Finally the tram got underway and as it started to pull up at the end of the track by the foot of Duke Street Hill Carrie was already out of her seat and waiting on the platform at the rear of the vehicle , with Fred at her side gripping her arm for fear that she would fall off before it actually stopped .
15 The two-seater Chipmunk aircraft had just taken off when it unexpectedly veered sharpley back towards the runway .
16 Yeah , even connected it on the end here , the , the station and set this display decoder up and it even did it there so it was nothing to do with the live lamp wire , the way they routed it we thought that perhaps rerouted it to the cable or something like that
17 And you hit it and it bends up and it just dies and I 've been sitting like , I mean I , I definitely do n't think that it is anything with the way I hold it in like cos I 've been sitting going and I just , just hit it and it goes ee , it just dies so you ca n't bend , that 's on too .
18 I used to find myself walking the landing bladed up and it only needed one word out of place and I 'd turn them into a Tetley Tea Bag and I 'd never get out .
19 And he filled up and it only cost me five to tenner a week .
20 You can reinforce the message by holding the leash close to the ground which will make it harder for the dog to stand up if it persistently tries to do so .
21 At the annual meeting in 1961 there was sharp criticism of an ‘ out of date ’ programme and by 1964 there was talk of winding the whole thing up because it just could n't pay its way .
22 Nobody participates in meetings for a very good reason : anything at all important is all sewn up before it ever gets on the agenda ’ .
23 Well I think everybody would , that had had their privacy erupted like they had been because they 'd been a small community for well through the years you see and for strangers to come in , I think it applies in every place that you go to , new places , you know that are built up after it just being a little country village people do resent you but I think now that they , they are really erm accepting us for the fact that we have brought things that they would never have had had the new town not been er sta , you know started here .
24 I remember running on the rolling lawns of Kikuyu grass before dinner , the night noises of the exceptionally vocal African insect life striking up as it quickly grew dark , night unrolling from the ground upwards ; bullfrogs — in fact all manner of rana and bufo-frogs the size of a pair of roiled-up rugby socks , toads with great horned eyebrows , and tiny , reddish , darting amphibians , starting to howl , shriek , growl , and purr , a backdrop to our dinner on the terrace to which we have been summoned by the stirring , thrilling , beating of a gong hung from a pair of tusks .
25 We 've heard a little bit of , about the Three-Ninetieth Group and we could go on and on because it certainly is indeed er historic organization .
26 As for the release of information , the stock exchange points out that it already requires price-sensitive information to be published through its regulated news service .
27 Government points out that it already owns it .
28 ECGD would like to point out that it actually has no ‘ official inspectors ’ , as quoted in the article , who arrange the recovery of goods in cases of buyer default .
29 ‘ Maybe I should have picked it up , found out if it really was blood or not … ’
30 ‘ You take the pen out and it automatically activates the recording mechanism . ’
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