Example sentences of "it have just [verb] [adv] [prep] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | My first book was an experiment to see if I could write and it has just gone on from there . ’ |
2 | A book about voodoo in Haiti written in the 1930s might seem an unlikely candidate for an NI Classic — especially since it has just gone out of print . |
3 | It has just woken up after fifteen thousand years . ’ |
4 | The show is hip and happening , dude : the audience looks as if it has just walked in off the King 's Road , the post-modernish set is ultra-cool , the show 's titles are dazzling , the best I 've seen on British television . |
5 | It has just come out with Networker for 80386 machines supporting Santa Cruz Unix and MS-DOS and will include UnixWare in the same ClientPak II later . |
6 | 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 . |
7 | 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 . |
8 | It 's just gone on from there really ! |
9 | But it 's just gone up to two pound twenty . |
10 | It 's just built up over the last coupla years really . |
11 | Well it 's just come up on my screen it says , He 's in the roller . |
12 | Let's say you receive a call in your boss ' office , on your boss ' phone , it 's just come through to the wrong one . |
13 | The wh he said in fact it 's just come in for the programme or something has n't it . |
14 | It 's just come out with Networker for 80386 machines supporting SCO Unix and DOS and will include UnixWare in the same ClientPak II down the road . |
15 | I know it 's just laid down as as sheet as to what you 're supposed to put down and all sorts but I ca n't remember exactly how detailed it 's got ta be . |
16 | The tale of L'Esquiriel goes on to tell of how the girl is approached by a young man playing with his erect penis ; she asks him what he has there — a squirrel , is the answer ; does she want it ? — yes please , let me hold it ; not yet , put your hand on it carefully ; it 's hot ! — ah , it 's just got out of its nest — and so on , until , after further euphemisms and foreplay , we return to the blunt world of crude speech as the squirrel enters the girl 's con to seek from her stomach the nuts she ate the day before . |