Example sentences of "[adv] [prep] it [verb] " in BNC.

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1 Happily there was some friendly cloud ; this time I went right through it to regain some horizontal reference , then bob in and out of the cloud until Jock had repaired the damage , I stayed near the cloud base just in case we were jumped again .
2 Sometimes there is a single vertical bar running right through it to obscure it .
3 I took a last look round , then only had to kick the top edge of the kite up a little for it to take the wind and lift .
4 And and they 've been waiting since for it to happen .
5 button far enough for it to take a picture then .
6 Now when that acid is fresh and has n't been used before two minutes is usually quite enough for it to have done the job it 's supposed to do .
7 I hope that 's clear enough for it moves the motion to withdraw the motion .
8 Elisabeth finished pouring and the activity took long enough for it to strike her that the Hulsbys were the sort of tourists who only appreciate sites for which postcards have been printed .
9 We were n't enclosed long enough for it to become worrying and I got a real adrenaline rush when at one point one side of the passage was replaced by empty space leading to a huge open chamber .
10 It 's hard to see how they could ever get to know each other long enough for it to come to this .
11 She waited tensely for it to happen .
12 It sets the scene perhaps for it said it is the blessing of the Lord that makes rich and he adds no sorrow to it .
13 A dreadful tragic place — elderly rheumatics dressing for dinner at the hotel ; artists not good enough ; beach-combers not young enough nor well enough off It filled me with pity and terror .
14 Pinto confirmed that a prototype Alpha box would be around by the end of the year ( UX No 376 ) — other officials said the emergence of shrink-wrapped non-proprietary Unix environments — with the added incentive of Unix System Laboratories Inc 's Destiny and Microsoft Corp NT already scheduled for Alpha — will open up the workstation market sufficiently for it to stake a claim .
15 ‘ This point can be proved by the constable dealing with the case describing the place sufficiently for it to come within the definition of ‘ street ’ at ( B ) 2 ante .
16 You can increase your chances of success by raising the kicking foot sufficiently for it to travel horizontally into the target .
17 ‘ I do n't know enough about it to answer that honestly .
18 Yet she may do ; and it is certainly a legitimate move in this revised game to be curious enough about it to ask .
19 There are many people , though , who can not bear to delve too deeply into this vast and painful subject , although they are anxious to know enough about it to enable them to act wisely when called upon to support and console a relative who has suffered a major loss .
20 He 's passionately interested in , in his wild flower garden but I do n't think I know enough about it to buy him anything about that .
21 Because it is so rare , most people simply do not know enough about it to avoid the worst of the disease .
22 Unfortunately , halfway through it loses the plot and its authenticity and sadly slips into excruciatingly painful white boy reggae mode .
23 Everything continues more or less as it had before , and it becomes increasingly evident that Jesus 's death has accomplished nothing .
24 Leaving everything more or less as it had been and closing the drawer , she turned her attention to the rest of the room .
25 As it happens , this is one of those cases where you can use the classic problem-solving approach more or less as it stands .
26 Worse , the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) has served notice that it is going to treat cable firms , under the terms of the 1992 Cable Act , more or less as it treats telephone companies — that is , with vigilance .
27 So off it goes .
28 Their main virtue in this respect is their currency , since they provide a pointer to likely public demand ( much of it stemming from the reviews themselves ) .
29 On most of the nationalisation stock ( paid to compensate former owners ) and earlier long-term borrowings they inherited at nationalisation ( much of it raised at the low interest rates of the 1930s ) they paid only 3 per cent .
30 The lottery of life is an enticing work — not least in showing how one of the most exciting sectors of applied biomedical science in the 1990s rests on the curiosity-oriented work ( much of it conducted in Cambridge , England ) of the 1950s and 1960s .
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