Example sentences of "it have [adv] [vb pp] [adv] [prep] " in BNC.
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31 | He said : ‘ I am delighted it has finally worked out for them after all these years . ’ |
32 | Breaknecking it has finally caught up with me . |
33 | After having to take development and marketing of its VX and MVX Intel Corp 80860-based graphics accelerator boards back under its wing after the collapse of its partner in that area , Fremont , California-based Vicom Systems Inc ( UX No 381 ) , Sun Microsystems Inc is hoping for more success with its SunVision graphics software environment which it has now turned over to Advanced Visual Systems Inc . |
34 | It has now reverted back to a quiet village , disturbed only at weekends by visitors from surrounding areas who come to fish , walk the frontage and watch the departure or arrival of passenger ferries and other shipping . |
35 | With the help of new technology it has now branched out into a franchise operation called Videopics . |
36 | The government has long made it clear that sterling would enter the Exchange Rate Mechanism during stage one of economic and monetary union which began in July ; it has now done so at the earliest appropriate time . |
37 | It has now opened again as a private one . |
38 | Now effectively shy of two of those founders , it has essentially retracted back to a die-hard core of some two dozen companies from a highly publicised swell of some 250 industry lights . |
39 | It has always remained technically under Peking 's control despite being surrounded by territory ceded or leased to Britain . |
40 | It has always done well in bids made to the Research Councils . |
41 | When I started , I was very much on my own but over the years it has really caught on in Whaddon and now membership has trebled . |
42 | Coxall and Robins ’ ( 1989 , p. 309 ) apology for a Conservative-dominated press , that ‘ it has never shied away from criticising the Conservative Party or a Conservative Government ’ , is misleading . |
43 | Originally a native of Mediterranean lands , it has never adapted completely to cold , wet conditions . |
44 | Australia 's Great Barrier Reef ( below left ) consists of thousands of coral islands , stretched along the entire coast of Queensland ; yet it has all grown up in the past 9000 years . |
45 | ‘ It has all worked out for the best , yes ? |
46 | As for multi-processing , Bull says it has recently woken up to the fact that it has a lead over most of its competitors — the Motorola-based DPX/2 line has supported symmetrical multi-processing with up to four processors for years , and now claims to have cornered a leading 20% share of the symmetrical multi-processing market . |
47 | It had been a mere moment of whiteness seen out of the corner of her eye but it had not moved purposefully like a horse does with a rider . |
48 | It had not turned out like that . |
49 | The laughter had been absent for a while , but it had not withdrawn far from him , the marks of its permanent habitation were still there . |
50 | It had not taken long for her to realise that it was not worth the risk of her position and Stephen 's love . |
51 | All this may seem obvious , but in fact it had not worked out like that in the earlier days of the cutters as I recall . |
52 | We do not know precisely on what grounds , but it had already broken down by August 1093 , the date which had been fixed for the final settlement of differences between the kings of England and Scotland . |
53 | He remembered falling , and the deck coming up to hit him , which brought back the sensation — although it had n't done so at the time — of the moment just before the torpedo hit Lanark . |
54 | The waiter brought the champagne and thumped it around in a bucket of ice to persuade us that it had n't come out of the refrigerator . |
55 | At once I can see Annexe B , Summerchild 's list of possible members of the Unit , as clearly as if it had just come out of the porridge oats box . |
56 | Then , when the horse is brought out of the stable , instead of just walking quietly along ( which it would if it had just come in from the paddock ) , it is jumping out of its skin , ready to spook and shy at anything , nostrils dilated , eyes bulging , and tail hoisted high . |
57 | It had never hurt before in anything but high jump but this time it hurt long jumping . |
58 | While the Midland had expected that its reserves would be lower than either Barclays or NatWest , both newly merged , it was horrified to learn that the true capital of Lloyds , a bank it had always looked down on , was £266m , £73m higher than its own . |
59 | But by June 1990 , the country 's economic situation had become so desperate that it had really run out of options . |
60 | It had suddenly borne in upon her that it was almost midnight and that she was in a strange flat in a strange city , with a strange man who was plying her with champagne . |