Example sentences of "[pos pn] [adj] [noun] it [vb mod] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | I hope that by telling you my personal experience it will help to save others . |
2 | ‘ So in my perfect republic it would be simple . |
3 | In my suggested scheme it would certainly include Elizabethan and Jacobean poetic drama . |
4 | It may be appropriate for the person who maintains the cash books to do this , but because of their technical nature it may be necessary for the accountant to do this instead . |
5 | The Communist Party had most to gain by combination with other groups , for with its strong discipline it could always hope to attract supporters from allied groups without losing many of its own members . |
6 | Advantageous as that is in its proper place it would be disastrous if such numbers turned up as eigenvalues . |
7 | Thaxted church was built in about 1340 and the finishing touches were made in the 1550s ; with its magnificent structure it could easily have been the cathedral of north-west Essex if one had ever been needed . |
8 | In its healthy state it will harbour millions of bacteria , known as resident flora , which are not only harmless but are essential to the proper functioning of the skin . |
9 | Now Clare had abandoned her respectful kindness it would be fun to fight with her . |
10 | Secondly , Woolwich feared that if it failed in its legal arguments it might incur penalties . |
11 | Secondly , Woolwich feared that if it failed in its legal arguments it might incur penalties . |
12 | And in its current form it would seem to be leading , at both regional and local level , to an increasingly unequal national geography ( Martin , 1988 ) . |
13 | Therefore , if the Directive is adopted in its current form it will reduce the available protection for certain electronic databases to the lower 10 years unfair extraction right period . |
14 | If the court orders a doctor to treat a child in a manner contrary to his or her clinical judgment it would place a conscientious doctor in an impossible position . |
15 | By its very existence it would start to replace the existing faiths . |
16 | ‘ By its very nature it would appeal to unemployed people , although it is not geared towards them . ’ |
17 | It means nothing , it shows nothing , except sometimes betrays its very vileness it would hide . |
18 | In its various forms it could be used to finance private roads , regulate traffic on the M25 and bring order to inner-city roads . |
19 | Once Newco had satisfied its loan-note obligations it could be liquidated . |
20 | Due to its sheer weight it can only be used at the Centre by special permission of the Department of Transport . |
21 | Clearly , if MDC does not possess the institutional resources to meet its new challenges it will not succeed . |
22 | that falls down Hugh , is that people assume because they 've commented that , that when it comes out in its final version it 'll reflect their particular comment . |
23 | From their written works it would appear that most psychologists up to about 1935 have assumed that these three things , separately or together , must constitute the whole of what we mean when we speak of a person feeling a touch as a touch on his shoulder or a pain as a pain in his foot . |
24 | Unlike a person whose actual reading betrays his powers of concentration , Mrs Varden 's pretended reading prevents her from actually reading , because in order to monitor and enjoy its communicative effect it would be impossible for Mrs Varden to accomplish the deed of reading in earnest . |
25 | You may find that you often have to do this , as even a modest wedding bouquet can be too large to fit into a reasonably-sized picture frame , and if it were reproduced in its original size it could become such a large picture that it would completely dominate any room in which it was hung . |
26 | A poor Provençal family might find their great son 's version of a familiar dish lacking in savour , although in its original form it would have made , with a saucerful of olives and perhaps a dish of fresh figs , an entire meal . |
27 | To distance himself from his domestic woes it can be expected Gooch will drive himself and his players even harder than usual in training the next few days . |
28 | If he does retire to concentrate on his medical duties it will be a big loss . |
29 | When Hal discovers Falstaff 's ‘ corpse ’ , feigning death to escape Douglas , he speaks a verse epitaph over him — the wrong medium , but that does n't matter since the death is n't real , either , and when Falstaff receives his true epitaph it will be in prose ( Henry V , II.iii.9ff . ) . |
30 | Our main concern is that if they take away one of our acute services it will have a domino effect on the rest |