Example sentences of "[pron] [conj] it [is] [adv] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 We keep going back ourselves so it 's quite lived in .
2 It must be twisted or summat cos it 's never done it before when I 've been in with the you know , to go bingo .
3 You recognise the anger you feel against your parents , but at this stage there 's little point in contacting them if it 's only to unload your bitterness .
4 If the aim of judicial review is seen as being only the protection of individuals ( whether people or organizations ) , this would suggest and justify standing rules which require the applicant to show that he , she or it is specially affected by what has been done or decided .
5 He probably tells you that it is all arranged at this end , whereas in point of fact nothing has been laid on except by verbal arrangement with him , and then we have a frightful period such as is now going on .
6 It is your responsibility to make sure that at that time , the specified terminal is connected and not logged in — Offline will not allocate a terminal to itself if it is already allocated to another VAX process .
7 It is the users responsibility to ensure that at the time of the next offline run , the specified terminal is connected and not logged in — the offline system will not allocate a terminal to itself if it is already allocated to another VAX/VMS process .
8 and let me unless it 's there to lose yeah , I mean
9 Because any sur any surplus you 're extracting from rich peasants is an artificial one because it 's only based on , you know , basically imposed suffering of poor peasants .
10 This comes as a great shock to me because it is well understood that anyone who does not like Erich Kleiber 's conducting must be a Nazi ! ’
11 It works for him and it 's obviously brought him dividends because he 's a really good player .
12 The notion of pastiche is now a guiding thread in critical discourse , to the extent that Palandri 's novel can be put forward as ‘ a disturbing attempt to write a kitsch novel ’ ( De Michelis 1986a ) , and the argument be made — — referring to Piersanti 's Charles — that no novelist born in the 1950s can return to ‘ traditional narrative ’ without being aware that he/she is ‘ holding an old toy which might look fine in an antique shop , or might be an ornament or a collector 's item , but is no good for playing with any more ’ ; if they do use it ( but why should they if it is no use any more ? ) , it is with a mixture of pleasure and melancholy , ‘ like someone repeating a game which once gave pleasure for years and years and now gives none , only the memory of the joy it once gave ’ ( De Michelis 1986b ) .
13 They also enable weaker members of the family to point out what is happening to them whilst it is actually happening .
14 somewhere in Mexico , the central part of it where it 's still falling to bits and
15 If so , they can be used to boost the lighting by aiming it where it is most needed .
16 So standardized is it that it is widely called ‘ the attitude test ’ ( a phrase also used by American police , see van Maanen 1978 ) , and when stopping members of the public constables are routinely instructed by colleagues to give the potential offender ‘ the attitude test ’ .
17 Well I , I listened to it and it 's so gon na be fucking
18 I 've removed it and it 's certainly lead , but you 'll need an expert to tell you that it 's a .22 . ’
19 The oak trees had not yet lost the vivid yellow-green of their late springtime , a colour so bright , so fresh and so unparalleled elsewhere in nature or in art that no one has ever been able to emulate it and it is never seen in paint or cloth or women 's dresses .
20 Of course it will be difficult for the child — the recipient of parental love — to appreciate affection and respond to it unless it is outwardly demonstrated .
21 But it but it 's often misinterpreted , as being of the right mind and having the right attitude , about understanding
22 He 's got some new ferreting land and erm and when he went to put him in his box there was a ferret already in it but it 's absolutely infested with these sheep tics .
23 ‘ You have got to accept it but it 's absolutely maddening that 30,000 people saw a good tackle but the referee gave a foul .
24 Above all we should resist it because it is really intended to allow legalised Euthanasia to sneak in by the kitchen window having been refused entry at the front door .
25 The trick is to recognise it while it is still happening — to relish it , embrace it and know that , in the nature of things , it can not last .
26 It would have been parochial of us not to have mentioned it as it is still used in many other countries .
27 What if it 's all changed and they do n't know me no more ? ’
28 anything or it 's never published that if you go self-employed
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