Example sentences of "of [noun sg] it [adv] [verb] " in BNC.
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1 | " The river 's part of my manor , but of course it also belongs to the River Police . |
2 | That makes it strategically important that I report back to Earth Central , Defries thought , and of course it also makes it highly unlikely that I 'll survive to do so . |
3 | Given this revised definition , it becomes natural to talk about preserving and defending democracy rather than achieving it , for of course it already exists in such fortunate countries as Britain and the United States . |
4 | And of course it mainly works the other way , does n't it — I mean Hilda hating Viola . ’ |
5 | Of course it still has to sell the idea to management and our source thinks Austin is still 24 months from a product , but the notion could be IBM 's answer to Microsoft 's NT . |
6 | But I had a problem in that very often people wanted a double wardrobe moving and of course it then needed two men . |
7 | It 's a euphemism for dusting , but of course it never works out like that . |
8 | Of course it never happened , but he definitely wanted to do it . |
9 | After years of uncertainty it now appears that a new chapter is about to open in the life of Dunkirk Mills . |
10 | I I think it 's just words that briefly talking about that issue office states because I think in terms of management it just does not make any sense . |
11 | In terms of sound it hardly matters , because once you plug in live , the real sound is brought out in the house — you go both direct and to the amp ( racked Gallien-Krueger and Ampeg SVT heads through Hartke cabs in Gene 's case ) . |
12 | As golf is another favourite Hastings sport and an ideal means of relaxation it probably does n't help his back problem that he gives the ball such a lick as to threaten to land it in the next kingdom ! |
13 | Its latest figures show that on £1.2bn of business it only made £18m profit . |
14 | This attitude has provoked strong reactions from various gallery holders who have benefited by the system , some of whom accuse Mr Job de Ruiter , the chairman of the Arts Council , of wanting to dictate the taste of the public by forcing on it a type of art it simply does n't want . |
15 | In the case of machinery it often makes operators indifferent to the dangers they are involved with every working day . |
16 | These three teachers were struggling to survive in an inner-city school and could not give the evaluation project the kind of commitment it really deserved . |
17 | In terms of policy it thus became essential to try to weaken the English grip upon both the sea and the main rivers , such as the Oise , which flowed into the Seine , by seeking to detach the Burgundians from their English links . |
18 | Beside the stone shell of the Flemyngs ' new mill , at the back of a piece of ground it now shared with a new carpet factory , long-haired cattle were browsing desultorily among mudded grass and stacks of timber . |
19 | When rock comes to rest under the influence of gravity it just stays there . |
20 | In more than five years of operation it allegedly invested more than US$50,000,000 in cocaine trafficking , arms smuggling and the illegal export of Indian mummies from the northern Atacama desert region . |
21 | At this point , the family probably can not yet afford a high quality modern house , but for reasons of status it still decides to move into a sub-standard , ill-constructed house built with modern materials , a house that turns into an oven during the summer and generates demand for electrically-powered cooling devices . |
22 | At some level of expenditure it presumably becomes inequitable for a disabled person to expect public support for the more expensive domiciliary care if this means depriving someone else of care of any sort . |
23 | Oakeshott suggests that each mode of experience constitutes a self-contradiction since the aim it pursues contradicts the criterion of coherence it implicitly acknowledges . |
24 | Once the ground has lost its protective cover of vegetation it quickly turns to desert . |
25 | The theory is now in disrepute but in side paths of the groves of Academe it still finds plenty of support . |
26 | During the early 1970s , when the sort of thinking exemplified by Limits to Growth permeated official forecasts of imminent shortages of strategic commodities , the CIA toyed with the idea that ‘ The United States ’ near-monopoly position as a food exporter … could give [ it ] a measure of power it never had before . ’ |