Example sentences of "[pron] [be] [adv] [vb pp] [conj] it " in BNC.

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1 I remember making this point a couple of years ago , yeah I made this point last year and I showed these pictures , I spent about twenty minutes on it , the following week I was , I was libelously accused and it was a libel , it was a serious libel erm er that I , that I said that females always had to submit erm I was very angry about that .
2 On seeking advice regarding the application I was originally informed that it was ‘ merely an extension of the existing ‘ Table Licence ’ to incorporate recently acquired adjacent premises ' .
3 The Bishop of London , Tait , agreed , adding that ‘ Any pity called up for the unfortunate Charles I was likely to be dissipated by statements in the services which were so exaggerated that it was likely when read to turn the staunchest Royalist into a parliamentarian . ’
4 It is merely a rough guide to the general sentencing levels that this court feels is appropriate , and allowance needs to be made for inconsistency on the part of the Court of Appeal itself ( Thomas , 1993 ) , plus the considerable ‘ latitude ’ which is normally allowed before it will interfere with a sentence passed by the Crown Court .
5 The next thing er which again er is er a detail of something which is already approved and it is merely than in our conditions of service during our discussions with the city er personnel department we noted , or they noted as it had arisen that we indicated the route to erm sick pay over a certain period and before a certain period but not the detail of how you got there .
6 First we may consider the phrase : ( 25 ) acrobatic performance In the light of the discussion above we may remark that this can be understood in either of two ways : first , as covering any performance which is so described because it is linked with the idea of an acrobat in the execution of his or her professional duties ; this would include expertise in juggling , tightrope walking , standing on one 's hands , and so on , even if they are performed by an amateur lacking any natural talent for the task ; second , ( 25 ) may be used to designate any performance which is acrobatic in itself , even if not part of the normal repertoire of acrobats , for instance , grabbing hold of a branch growing out from a cliff just after falling from the top .
7 The castle walls surround the medieval town , which is still inhabited as it has been for hundreds of years .
8 But it is infinitely worse if you are so divided that it is apparent you can not take any action at all .
9 But I thought you were so experienced that it would n't have affected you as it did me . ’
10 She 's also told that it 's Grace Poole that slept by the Rochester 's bed .
11 She was so absorbed that it was not for some time that she realized that the sea on her left was no longer the water of the estuary but had become the ocean .
12 The government responded to this pressure : the Bill differed in some respects from the White Paper , and the Bill itself was constantly amended as it went through Parliament .
13 Yet we are also agreed that it can never be complete in itself .
14 We 're well matched where it matters , Lil and 1 .
15 One is usually told that it will also knit double-knit .
16 One was subsequently excluded because it proved impossible to advance the colonoscope as far as the anastomosis in this patient .
17 When viewers have had time to develop their own theories about the scene , they are strongly motivated when it comes to listening to the soundtrack to check whether or not they were right .
18 They are doubly attracted when it is clear to them that any movement will be all one way , and where all they have to do is to bide their time and wait for the inevitable profits .
19 As children grow older they are usually told that it is ‘ babyish ’ to cry .
20 And they 're absolutely shattered and it 's windy and
21 If they were unable to describe it they were then asked whether it was of a particular type .
22 It 's easily manipulated and it dries hard .
23 It 's incorrectly built and it also appears to have been used as an excuse for fly tipping , and industrial fly tipping at that .
24 It 's completely restored and it was used for several films — Macbeth and Becket , to name two of them .
25 In fact it 's sometimes said that it 's one of the very great privileges of the public is that they can , by dint of writing something , and putting it in an envelope with a stamp on it , get it to arrive on an editor 's desk , and have the editor at least give a cursory glance if not a more serious glance at what 's going on , so it 's a privilege and it 's an opportunity in that case .
26 It 's often Overlooked but it is probably the single most beneficial part — having a good time .
27 It is however appreciated that it can be difficult to obtain a Police report in some foreign countries .
28 It is generally assumed that it is not cost-effective to screen either younger or older women , but the achievements of any screening in this area are unclear .
29 Furthermore , it is generally assumed that it is an easy matter to pollute and get away with it .
30 The Act does not define what actually constitutes an artistic work , though it is generally accepted that it would cover any product made by an artist or craftsperson , which is normally unique , hand-made and makes a personal expressive statement .
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