Example sentences of "it [is] [adj] [adv] and " in BNC.

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1 It 's 1.30 a.m. and I should go to bed , long day tomorrow .
2 And so I 'm crying now ; it 's five o'clock and you 'll be arriving any minute .
3 It 's smashing walking along this track because it 's firm underfoot and the views back to Malham and over to Great Scar and Attermire are worth nine out of ten in anybody 's book .
4 It 's 10 a.m. and Charlie Neil , Central 's main weather presenter , arrives at the Weather Department .
5 And it really is very localized but that is quite angry , it 's bubbly too and spreading , little finger .
6 It 's 5.15 a.m. and we have spent the last two hours asleep in a lay-by just outside Solihull and breakfast in Birmingham is the next item on the agenda . ’
7 So the sun shines bit of the courtyard when it 's eight o'clock and that when it 's nine o'clock and so forth .
8 It 's eight now and Mr Vigo has n't seen it for years .
9 It 's 7.50 a.m. and the inmates have been locked in their cells since 8.45 p.m. the previous evening .
10 It 's all there and Mitch 's shots are fantastic , plenty to choose from .
11 It 's 8.30 am and I must find that discharge connector for the breathing gear — we 'll need it on the ship when loading begins .
12 So the sun shines bit of the courtyard when it 's eight o'clock and that when it 's nine o'clock and so forth .
13 And so you 're , er , have actually , you 're at or whatever , erm , it would be nice to think , and I 'm not exactly sure , my geography 's not that good at that particular part , but you , you sort of tend to look at it , and say , right if he 's in and out , and it 's ten o'clock and somebody says they can see him at eleven , you know , and there 's this tendency , to say , well erm , O K. Yes ?
14 It 's 9 a.m. and Tara senses something is going to happen , but she 's not really sure what .
15 It 's 1967 again and Jim Morrison is all over town .
16 ‘ My mum thinks it 's OK too and Lol is great .
17 Then it 's quiet again and one of them murmurs , " Aye , that 's how it is . "
18 I go to the quarter behind the Quai du Port , it 's old there and very poor .
19 It 's water-resistant too and long lasting .
20 It 's 7.15 a.m. and time for the first break of the day .
21 It 's big enough and besides yer 'll be near the closets when yer need 'em . ’
22 Now it is twelve o'clock and school is out and all those who do not stay behind for dinner are bounding down Trafalgar Street , the little ones paddling up to the Wellington-tops in the drifts left on either side by the snow plough .
23 By the time dinner has been eaten and evening prayers conducted it is eight o'clock and about a hundred people have gathered .
24 It is 11 am and we count 43 shrouded bodies — 12 of them babies , another eight young children .
25 It is useful now and again to reflect on the reasons why the IBOA was established and why being a member of such as an Association is of such vital importance .
26 It is available now and costs £16 for a starter kit , including a manual and Hui 's interpreter .
27 It is 2.30 am and things are very lively at Number 17 where it gets noisier by the minute .
28 Then check it is clear below and attempt a straight stall , followed by a few stalls in very gentle turns .
29 And now that it is 8.58 pm and I have done fifty-eight minutes of work , which I deem to be more than enough for one night I am signing off , because , I 'm lazy .
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