Example sentences of "[verb] [prep] it [prep] [det] " in BNC.

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1 Muted sounds , and , once , a cry of pain , came from behind the closed doors that led off it on either side .
2 Goes for it in that sort of way .
3 Then when it " just happens " , spontaneously and romantically , they and their girlfriends hope they do n't get pregnant , or they do n't think about it at all .
4 Yeah , but I did n't really think about it like that .
5 And if you were a a lecturer in politics and you went to see this play then you might think oh look oh and then you 'd start thinking and if you were a scientist you would think about it in another way and if you were an artist you 'd think about it in another way .
6 And if you were a a lecturer in politics and you went to see this play then you might think oh look oh and then you 'd start thinking and if you were a scientist you would think about it in another way and if you were an artist you 'd think about it in another way .
7 But Beatriz Lavandera has adopted this approach to syntactic variation in a much more radical form , and argued for it in some detail .
8 If she was going to quarrel about it at all she would have to do it seriously .
9 Listen to what people say about it in these magazines . ’
10 How can you chat about it like this when I 'm holding you and when I want to kiss you and make love to you so badly I ca n't even think of anything else ! ’
11 Acknowledgement of the fact of this fundamental need for a ‘ god ’ , and the need to provide for it in any social order , can be the vital factor in finding a way to ease the sufferings of the world .
12 I mean , er the thing is if you 've got a name and you want to that 's the time to work for it in that little
13 because you know the kind of material we 're recording bad language is n't gon na get an appropriate representation , and he 's not to worry about it on that
14 Kardamíli seemed a good base , since the author himself writes of it with such affection .
15 He had lived with his past for the best part of fifty years , and his book tells what he had come to know of it over that interval of time , with help from the theories of Marx and Freud .
16 It includes the presence of other animals that may be predators or competitors for food , animals of other species that may communicate with it in finding food or raising an alarm , and individuals of its own species that interact with it in many ways , competitively , nepotistically , and in co-operation .
17 Particularly er children or animals who have no say in it at all , we , we take the view that er it 's a family show and we take that responsibility very carefully and very seriously .
18 Anyway I wo n't say any more because I 'll other people will eventually go but Hugh Berger is a gentleman who owns it or who lives in it at this time
19 I do n't object to it at all .
20 So , there 's something given , that entitles feedback I was giving you then , some people referred to it as this .
21 I am so pleased with the Elna ; I began making my bedroom curtains some time ago , but had to steel myself and put them away , as the ‘ British Biographies ’ book was exerting great pressure to keep to its schedule and I had to work on it in much of my spare time .
22 I 've looked at it on both sides , from different angles and colour is something to do with it .
23 He had not really looked at it like that before .
24 ‘ I had n't looked at it like that .
25 Oh yeah , I 've never looked at it like that before , yeah , ah , ah
26 Very few are so unmusical as to have no music at all within them , and all of us are surrounded by it for much of the time .
27 … the novel is destined to be perceived from within itself — the same as the real world … to enjoy a novel we must feel surrounded by it on all sides …
28 Anna decided that she must not profit by it in any way and consulted Constanza — she always did : You are my chief heir and it will affect you — Constanza told her to go ahead .
29 How we buy food also has an influence on how much we eat of it at any one meal .
30 To sum up , in positing an item as an ontological existent we are at the same time by implication positing this item as a potential subject of a non-arbitrary subset of predicates from among an indefinite number of meaningful predicates , and hence as completely determinate with regard to possible descriptions that may be given of it at any given time .
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