Example sentences of "it [vb past] [prep] [pron] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 His arms around her , he began so gently that although McAllister was already feeling stifled , and the fear of men which had beset her for so long had begun to tighten its grip on her , she not only allowed him to kiss and fondle her face and neck , but let him undo her hair , so that it tumbled about her shoulders , as magnificent in its abandon as he had imagined it in the long nights when he had been unable to sleep .
2 Each would be asked to notify the IMF within one month whether it agreed to its share as determined by the IMF ; each successor could formally accede to the IMF once it had met the formal conditions specified .
3 That led the court to hold in that judgment that , as a result of article 234 , a member state might have to apply , in its relations with the other member states , rules different from those which it applied in its relations with non-member countries , even though they were all party to the same international convention .
4 Ordinary people who have been awarded ‘ less important ’ decorations like the British Empire Medal may well find it pinned on their chest not by the Queen but a lord lieutenant in the form of a retired colonel or minor baronet .
5 Even here , however , status still reared its head , for Louis XIV clearly thought it derogated from his dignity as a ruler by divine right to be referred to in the final treaty in the same terms as William III , the mere constitutional king of a parliamentary state .
6 it got on my wick the bitchiness of it all , did n't you , I could n't , I could n't do with it Joy I do n't think
7 ‘ He was n't too bad , but he kept copying the way I said ‘ country ’ in a very meaningful fashion and it got on my nerves .
8 ‘ All those foreign voices , it got on my nerves . ’
9 Well it was long and it was straggly and it got on my nerves !
10 He tapped in the code , then waited , knowing the signal was being scrambled through as many as a dozen sub-routes before it got to its destination .
11 I represent the principle of authority and am bound to make it respected in my person : such has always been the conscious object of my relations with the working class . ’
12 Twenty one years later it passed to his son-in-law , Mark Rainsford I , whose beers and fine ales were brewed here in turn by his son Mark Rainsford II .
13 Following his death , it passed to his son .
14 When pulled tight it effectively secured her to the bench , and as it passed behind her knees , so her legs were strapped in the position where her feet were above her head .
15 Knee-length , it clung to her figure lovingly .
16 The tears were moistening her hair so that it clung to her cheeks , and they did n't look like stopping .
17 It asked for their support in getting the law changed , and the guidelines strengthened by law .
18 She 'd been feeling sick a morning or two , but not so as it interfered with her work , and no one remarked on it .
19 Lord Home , the last Etonian prime minister , disliked politics because it interfered with his sport .
20 Even Elena 's advice could be unwelcome when it interfered with his contemplation of the project .
21 He would run the United States like a business , with little regard for the Constitution if it interfered with his plans , declare martial law to combat the drug problem , eliminate Social Security or the entire defence budget if it was thought necessary to meet the government 's deficit , and remove the power of Congress to raise taxes .
22 So far from killing himself over Wolfgang , he would not have hesitated to end the liaison if it interfered with his plans . ’
23 It interfered with your peace of mind .
24 yesterday , cos it laid on its fluff on you .
25 Instead the Kette , led by the intrepid Müncheberg , dived after the Sunderland strafing it as it taxied to its moorings , and sinking it .
26 Once Buckthorn disturbed a snake , and leapt into the air as it whipped between his paws to vanish down a hole at the foot of a birch .
27 It looked to the children more like the kind of grin a tiger might give before it pounced on its prey .
28 The attack on Birkenhead was especially revealing ; it centred on his lack of gravity in the highest legal office , but it was occasioned too by his lack of concern for party in the excitement of office .
29 It lived in their minds , their thoughts , and their daily talk , and it was contagious .
30 It crept towards her mouth , inch by inch .
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