Example sentences of "[num] it [is] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 With × ] 2 it is just in the field with Alpha ; with × 20 it is out of the Alpha field , but much more prominent .
2 2 It is approximately , 232,000 metres from Barbados to Tobago .
3 22 It is also worthwhile considering whether exhibitions should be set up elsewhere , close to the area/s most affected by the exhibition proposals .
4 Following the case of Shepherd v Law Land plc [ 1990 ] STC 795 it is now clear that group relief for that proportion of Target 's current accounting period which falls before the date it leaves the group remains available .
5 I sent away and passed the exams and I became a policeman , but I always wanted to become a policeman when I , from about eighteen or nineteen it 's just that I drifted the wrong way .
6 2.1 It is widely recognised that English law is defective in failing to provide satisfactory machinery for the imposition on freehold land of positive obligations ( such as obligations to repair and to contribute to communal maintenance costs ) which can then be enforced against successors in title to the original owner of the land .
7 It may be found by using the V of the Hyades as a kind of ‘ arrow-head ’ ; with × 8.5 it is just in the field with Gamma .
8 As was pointed out in the judgment , ‘ In some contractual relationships , for example life assurance and pensions schemes — some aspects of the law regulating conditions of employment , and … various state-run schemes such as national insurance ’ , 35 it is ultimately a matter for the parties concerned whether the individual should be treated as a man or a woman .
9 With Wexford House situated in what was the heart of Bomber Command during World War II it is very fitting that it will honour in particular the men and women of that Command .
10 Considering Dicke 's thesis as well as van de Kamer 's publication in 1952 it is quite clear that when Dicke went to Utrecht to perform his classic dietary fat absorption experiments , he had already been convinced for years that wheat , rye , and oat meal products were the offending agents in the cause of coeliac disease .
11 Featured by Citalia since 1981 it is about 400 yards from the beach and the resort 's centre .
12 At the end of 1992 it is probably a reasonable generalization that the average 30-second commercial , including the cost of bulk prints , but not of repeat fees ( see page 129 ) , would cost some £65000–£70000 to make .
13 With Stacker 3.0 it 's now possible to more than double your disk capacity using the package 's customisable compression features .
14 3 Of course New Yorks is not the capital of the USA. 4 It is well known that Maths is harder than English .
15 And , although I 'm not so bitchy as to suggest women want him only for what they can get , nine times out of ten it 's probably the truth . ’
16 Nine times out of ten it 's always a bad earth .
17 In his view the " pros " of segregation are : i Recruitment of interested specialist staff ii Specially designed environments iii Concentration of resources for dementia , avoiding diffusion of effort iv Special attention to relatives ' needs and the greater acceptability to relatives of a " special unit " v Avoids fear , antagonism and rejection from the non-demented vi Special information , research and teaching are useful spin-offs The " cons " of segregation are : i It is usually a more expensive option ii Admission criteria are difficult to establish — what degree of dementia qualifies ?
18 Perhaps this is where eighteen and eighty are in accord — for at eighty it is more important to be interesting , whereas no doubt at sixty it is necessary to be right .
19 1 It is much more effective to carry out media relations activities within the framework of a detailed plan than simply to publicise events as they happen and haphazardly respond to media enquiries .
20 Whereas one to one it 's just you and that particular you know business .
21 Although there is a pattern produced , because the number of rows tucked is only one it is rather indistinct , although good for a fine , fairly smooth-finish fabric .
22 By the late 1660s it is almost certain that , as Thomas Shadwell [ q.v. ] suggests in The Medal of John Bayes ( 1682 ) , he began employing the young Dryden to write prefaces , commencing a relationship that developed through the 1660s and 1670s when Herringman bought up the copyrights to most of Dryden 's work .
23 For r { 24.74 it is still possible to find some trajectories which spiral into C+ , but , at r = rH 24.74 , C+ lose stability and in r } 24.74 all numerically computed trajectories wander forever near the strange attractor .
24 On the M twenty five it 's still very busy in both directions and indeed especially the M four and M forty interchanges with the M twenty five are very busy at the moment .
25 Six and nine it 's always one less when in n it when you 're adding nine ?
26 That 's one of the reasons why I 'm , why I 'm also interested in er in Freud because I think Freud provides that , I happen to think that Freud 's studies of , of crowd group psychology actually explain that , although it takes time to you know , certainly not at five minutes to four , it takes time to explain , but I think there is an explanation there and I think you c y y you can claim that there are certain emotions to do with identification and idealization , th that our genes have a programmer which things like erm nationalistic erm , erm er kind of jingoism can exploit in a modern culture which in primal cultures would have primal cultures people identify with their , with their local kin and their local culture and that 's that might ultimately promote their reproductive success , but that in modern cultures , this identification occurs with erm on a completely different level and with lots of people will not merely because you need so many more people modern cultures you have much more erm much bigger groups and you just meet many more people that , than you were ever th there is some interesting research , research recently published for instance which shows erm organizations seem to have a critical size and that people are not really able to track more than about two hundred and fifty other people , in other words you can have face-to-face relationships with up to about two hundred and fifty others , but once it gets beyond two hundred and fifty it 's too much and you start forgetting somebody as if the brain was primed to an optimum group size and once you get above that you just ca n't keep .
27 Two eighty , three hundred , and twenty against you there at three twenty it 's there , are you all done ?
28 Pickup selection is interesting : on position one we get the bridge pickup by itself ; on number two it 's both pickups coil-tapped ; position three is both humbuckers ; position four is the neck pickup coil-tapped ; while number five is the neck humbucker by itself .
29 We do enough succession planning in C U you know it 's magic you know , you know number two like it 's smashing number two it 's still you know , you know young children , number two has a different connotation to what it does here , but definitely if you are a number two here , it means the same to what a child thinks it is , but I
30 Good example in ninety two if Harlow council had been a whole er whole council election in nineteen ninety two it 's highly likely the Conservatives would have taken control .
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