Example sentences of "[adv] it [vb -s] [pos pn] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 You do n't listen to what he 's saying because you know just it just becomes so it takes your attention away .
2 So it heightens my respect for them'
3 So it heightens my respect for them . ’
4 Moreover it recognizes its duty to make such publications accessible to the public at large , and not to restrict access on any grounds other than legal .
5 In short , what this has to do with modern poetry is very clear ; what it has to do with modern criticism is not clear at all , since that criticism has , as we have seen , no vocabulary for dealing with it , and moves further and further from finding such a vocabulary , the more it takes its lead from linguisticians like Saussure and Jakobson .
6 The more History attempts to transcend its own rootedness in historicity , and the greater the efforts it makes to attain , beyond the historical relativity of its origin and its choices , the sphere of universality , the more clearly it bears the marks of its historical birth , and the more evidently there appears through it the history of which it is itself a part … inversely , the more it accepts its relativity , and the more deeply it sinks into the movement it shares with what it is recounting , then the more it tends to the slenderness of the narrative , and all the positive content it obtained for itself through the human sciences is dissipated .
7 You can put them on the and now it stings my hand cos I cos
8 I have seen it grow from the seed , until now it dominates his thinking .
9 Right now it serves its purpose , and increasing domestic production is going to increase world production , if there 's more supply , prices will fall , if everything else stays the same .
10 Now it seems my goading has borne fruit . ’
11 Cypress Semiconductor Corp is disappointed with its Sparc business , which is falling and impacted its earnings in at least the last quarter : but now it reckons its Pinnacle Sparc shot ( UX No 381 ) will save the day in the second half .
12 Often it makes its home in holes beneath a river bank or among rocks .
13 It 's the same with most of the old ladies I talk to , and frankly it breaks your heart .
14 On reflection , the catering industry may well be much better off as a result of the Government 's proposals for a self-regulatory approach , but it all depends at the end of the day on how well it gets its act together , using Hazard Analysis and Risk Assessment systems to identify the problem areas .
15 From here it makes its way down the coast — an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty — to the holiday resort of Cromer .
16 Despite Berkeley 's comment that ‘ a little attention ’ to this will enable anyone to see how successfully it makes his point , this argument has provoked a considerable amount of detailed discussion .
17 No matter how badly it offends your self-image , weigh yourself , even if you have to take yourself off to the abattoir to do it .
18 Slowly it makes its way down the tube .
19 If we decide to change the way we do business or change the way the application works on how it models our environment , then we have to revisit using this architecture every single client machine on the network and upgrade that particular business function .
20 We are continually being told by British Rail that how it spends its money depends on priorities .
21 Our subject is the body clock ; how it influences our physiology and behaviour and how it interacts with the rhythms in our environment .
22 It is therefore of the utmost importance that these people understand the law and how it affects their work and the conduct of the catering business .
23 See how it leaves his body and becomes at one with Thy Word ! ’
24 Therapist : ‘ You say you feel awful at times ; let's look at that and try and break it down into the physical sensations you feel , the thoughts you have , and how it effects your behaviour .
25 To take but one example of overlap , the kinds of question that are routinely asked in media education can fruitfully be applied to literature : who is communicating with whom and why ; how the text has been produced and transmitted ; how it conveys its meaning .
26 Then it takes its place over a period of time within the wider teaching of the principles , planning and practice of worship , enabling the ordinand to explore the theological and practical importance of music in an appropriate context .
27 If a neutral event occurs within this time-window then it loses its neutrality .
28 If it does not facilitate economic growth and expansion then it limits its capacity to raise taxes and so cuts into the public revenue on which its own power depends .
29 I do n't like just doing research without communicating it , and I think if you 've got an interest and you can communicate it well to people , then it stimulates their enjoyment and of course in a time when there 's going to have to be more and more leisure I think that 's very important .
30 And I think if you 've got an interest and you can communicate it well to people , then it stimulates their enjoyment , and of course in a time when there 's going to have to be more and more leisure , I think that 's very important .
  Next page