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

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1 She went where it directed her , tracing a design on the face of the Earth .
2 The cat opened one eye cautiously , saw that it was true and sprang onto Mildred 's shoulder where it rubbed its head gratefully against her hair .
3 To straddle the hurdle between its Unix commitments , where it derives its revenues , and NT , Sequent last week reorganised its management to give it more strategic depth .
4 It only came out a couple of times , and I could n't get the words apart the end where it sounded something like ‘ scores off the bar , F*CK CANTONA , Brian Deane , Brian Deane , Brian Deane ’ .
5 When the hopped wort has been cooled it is run to fermenting vessels where it meets its destiny with yeast .
6 Right where it meets which is there .
7 While I was struggling to stop it , frost was formed where it struck my already cold hand .
8 It collects these flakes with the brush near the end of its hind legs and passes them forward to its mouth where it kneads them with saliva .
9 While it may not succeed where it thinks it can , if it thinks it ca n't the probability is that it wo n't .
10 To understand why damage to Broca 's area impairs speech we need to know both where it gets its input from and what it does to that input .
11 Academic English was a recent invention , largely of the inter-war years ; and even where it existed it had commonly stopped with the early nineteenth century .
12 Where it existed it was characteristic of states which , although they had long and proud cultural traditions , had suffered serious setbacks or for some reason lacked self-confidence .
13 RETURNED to London after too long an absence , Le Cirque Imaginaire is back until 6 March in the Riverside Studios where it made its UK debut many years ago .
14 Where it made itself felt yesterday was on the downswing .
15 Where it tells you you 're at
16 Where it offers itself up
17 As the gaunt farmer Spoke , Sparkes noticed dried blood on his shirt front where it met his breeches .
18 The company has now started flying from Gatwick , and , to help to stimulate demand for the Gatwick operation , Airtours has become a regular advertiser in the South East , particularly on the Underground , where it promotes its holidays to the price-conscious sun seeker .
19 Governments , it seems , have yet to learn a fact that most smokers readily acknowledge : the tobacco industry has got them precisely where it wants them .
20 There is little right of reply on radio and television and even where it exists it is not particularly likely to be heard by the audience of the original programme .
21 career development and training , where it exists it leads to a happier employee ;
22 Where it ended I forget .
23 ( g ) the perceived advantages and disadvantages of the takeover ( in a contested bid , the offeror will need to think carefully about what arguments it will put forward in order to persuade the target 's shareholders to accept the offer against their board 's recommendation and , where it needs its own shareholders ' approval , its arguments justifying the proposed bid ) ; and
24 See a few of them , you know right at beginning where it shows you preface ?
25 Once it was home , the stalwart Alan helped me up to the loft with it , where it awaits my occupation in due course .
26 Then there is the 39-member-strong Royal Society of Portrait Paints which operates from the Mall Galleries where it holds its annual exhibition .
27 She may have killed a rabbit in a spot — a dead-end , for example — where it prevents her escape by blocking the burrow .
28 But if you quite like sleeping with the offending partner for other reasons , you 'll need earplugs , a light where it disturbs nobody and a good book till the warm drink you 've made for consolation lulls you back to the Land of Nod — pending the next onslaught .
29 Thus , these subcultures respectively enable corporate officials and lower-class adolescent males to commit crimes without too many pangs of conscience ; through their sanitizing prism , each sub-culture softens criminal acts so that they assume the appearance of ‘ not really ’ being against the law , or it transforms them into acts required by a morality higher than that enshrined in a parochial criminal law .
30 Skinnergate faces two choices : it either declines into a traffic-filled street of second-rate shops or it cleans itself up , providing an open air alternative to the Cornmill 's enclosed space .
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