Example sentences of "[verb] it in [adj] " in BNC.

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1 And the need for audience contact I found particularly important because if you get feedback from the audience looking them in the eye involving them then you 're able to know how your talk is progressing and whether you need to modify it in any way to be able to maintain the audience 's interest .
2 Mr Budgen said : ‘ The Government 's actions have been disgraceful , describing Maastricht as an issue of confidence in private and denying it in public .
3 Clearly to have the combination of an off bore sight capability for a a missile such as A S R A A M , the er advance short range air to air missile , the combination of the agility of the weapon and the flat platform together has been shown to be really needed , you ca n't have one without the other and that somebody who has only agility in the aircraft or agility in the in the weapon , will lose against somebody who has it in both .
4 You wo n't know it in 2000
5 I may never know it in this world but I shall be told it in the next .
6 That 's what this house is here for , it is here to introduce primary legislation if we need it and in my view we do need it in this area and it is it 's high time the government recognised that and should not be afraid t t t to take action simply because primary legislation is required .
7 ‘ You can translate it in various ways .
8 An objection which has been raised by Jürgen Moltmann ( see chapter 7 ) and by others who have been concerned to set our present time in the light of the eschatological emphasis of the New Testament is that Barth and his allies in the 1920s who aimed to recover that emphasis in fact misinterpreted it by twisting it into the ‘ eternal moment ’ of the encounter between time and eternity , ; and that his mature theology distorted it in a-different but equally damaging fashion by swallowing up the whole of time and history in the central history of Jesus Christ , and by dissolving that away in turn in the eternal self-determination of God within the council of the Trinity to be ‘ God for man ’ .
9 I noted that he pronounced it in eighteenth-century fashion : ‘ m ’ verse' .
10 Bill Wood of Durham called about it , desisted from hurling it in this direction and merely gave the fascinating information that it has been about for 1,500 years and started off in Anglo Saxon as sacleas , meaning ‘ without strife ’ .
11 He drew it in 1914 when he was an art student in Munich .
12 Will the right hon. Gentleman confirm that the Government — without announcing it in any manifesto — have increased national insurance charges by 40 per cent ?
13 Explosions of some sort were almost unavoidable if the principle of nationality was to be extended beyond the states which embodied it in 1880 .
14 De Gaulle had long believed that the PCF 's tendency to align itself with Moscow invalidated it in crucial respects , and in November 1945 he had refused to give the PCF one of the three ministries that he regarded as essential to national security .
15 ‘ A never-never land of material values expressed in terms of gorgeous living , a plethora of high-powered cars and revolvers ’ , as A. E. Morgan described it in 1939 , ‘ of unbridled desire , of love crudely sentimental or fleshly , of vast possessions , of ruthless acquisition , of reckless violence ’ .
16 This group were aware of the injury and described it in neutral terms of sensation .
17 In spite of its brilliant career , the society 's delay in giving it an award of merit and a first-class certificate indicates unusual prudence , for ‘ the Château Yquem of apples ’ , as E. A. Bunyard described it in 1929 , did not receive these confirmations of its quality until 1962 .
18 A writer called Thomas Carlyle described it in 1824 as ‘ A frightful scene … a dense cloud of pestilential smoke hangs over it forever … and at night the whole region becomes like a volcano spitting fire from a thousand tubes of brick . ’
19 It was first discovered by Gallard in 1884 , but credit has been given to Dieulafoy who described it in 1889 .
20 Jesus has brought a unique new way of life into the world ; St John described it in those first verses of his gospel :
21 On 13 October , the Leader of the Opposition described it in three different ways — which is typical of him .
22 When the botanical writer John Worlidge described it in 1676 , he called the fruit ananas , a Brazilian dialect word , but went on to call it a ‘ fruit like a pineapple but much bigger ’ .
23 After having amassed around 200 hours on the Corsair since purchasing it in 1982 , the novelty of flying this beast has not diminished : ‘ Today I feel that every flight in the Corsair is as exciting as the first , mainly because with the Corsair you can not afford to be complacent , as the aircraft will sometimes bite back , so I have to be alert all the time while I am flying ’ .
24 Laughing he tossed the hot nut , and Emilia , squealing , caught it in gloved hands .
25 One particularly violent swerve took it right off the counter and Finn caught it in mid air , upside down , wheels spinning .
26 He held it up for the others to see and then threw it at the thin man contemptuously who automatically caught it in both hands .
27 Wexford grasped it in both his hands , raised it high and brought it down hard to meet the empty air .
28 Because the characters and the dialogue of this offstage life were created by the original cast , we have not included it in this script .
29 In many respects deconstruction has not been avidly employed in analysing Renaissance texts and there is a certain contradiction in employing it in this study .
30 Political influence is what the Other Side wants as much as anything and you 've got to meet it in that arena .
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