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

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1 All these sorts of things are going to be the sorts of things that we 'll bring up in discussion , but you wo n't realize what the problems are until you tried doing it .
2 You 're different , you 're dynamic , let it come across a bit more about you and you know , what a good team you are and you 've cracked it .
3 I know that looking for a Purple Heart , or V C , erm are but I do believe it needs to be it needs to be clarified .
4 It does n't seem to me from what I read of page thirty one of that inspector 's report that he was in any different position by the absence of the Policy E two than he would be if he 'd got it .
5 That 's erm moving along a little bit erm there 's also this business of of what I suppose in other contexts has been called blaming the victim , this business of children somehow inviting the the , if they have actually been abused , it must be because they 've invited it so erm that 's erm .
6 I think there must be because I 've seen it several times now and just in , in , you know
7 For Dr Neil the feel of her , so soft , the scent of her hair , and of McAllister herself , was so wild and sweet and struck him with such force that his breathing grew a little ragged and his body reminded him of how long it had been since he had satisfied it .
8 It 's once you 've allocated it it 's erm you know it 's actually gone from your from your calculation .
9 ‘ The reason I think you have , ’ the face says , ‘ is that we have found it . ’
10 The only thing I want to hear is that they 've called it off .
11 The main reason our children try drugs is that they 're searching for pleasure , and the main reason they carry on is that they 've found it .
12 ‘ The main benefit is that I 've enjoyed it ; that 's my yardstick . ’
13 ‘ The main benefit is that I 've enjoyed it ; that 's my yardstick . ’
14 What it does mean is that he had made it plain that he intended a legal relationship to exist between two persons ( soon to become trustee and beneficiary ) .
15 ‘ There are a lot of things that make Milton so good , but the most important is that he wants to do it , ’ says John .
16 The trouble is if you start using it then everybody else thinks you 're listening to music and they 'll start bring theirs in .
17 That 's cos I kept hitting it , bloody .
18 Of course , that 's right it 's cos it 's got it on the .
19 I am going to say that at the deep level there is not but at the ordinary , everyday level there often is and we need to take it quite seriously .
20 So I know a guy for example who , when he gets his Visa bill say the last third of the month , he puts it into the envelope , and makes a note in the diary on say the twenty first , to pay the Visa bill , and when he gets to the twenty first , lo and behold , he knows where the Visa bill is and he has to pay it .
21 Yes it is cos they 've resealed it again today .
22 Kyle , I 've already told you , I know what that is cos I 've got it cos I brewed it myself if you remember .
23 That 's if we 've got it back !
24 It 's er it 's like , y'know if your dog 's called Rover , it 's if you want get it to pay attention , it 's the way you say Rover or B M W or .
25 That 's unless they 've deserved it , or done something bad .
26 That 's just an estimate — nobody really knows what the figure is because nobody bothers to calculate it .
27 And that 's because I 've had it cut .
28 ‘ It 's not the money — it 's whether you want to do it .
29 Yet Politics among Nations is the book which made him a major figure in the discipline and its message is as we have described it .
30 And , if the situation with regard to individual psychological development and the evolution of culture is as I have represented it , then this is merely the first of many profound insights into the psychology of the ego — and perhaps most especially the superego — which can be expected but which were totally unobtainable as long as the individualistic fallacy blocked the way .
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