Example sentences of "a [noun] [conj] it [is] " in BNC.

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1 Its dual chart is an attractive option in that it allows you to link two pie or bar chart charts or a pie and a bar chart — as illustrated here ( DUALGRPH ) It also offers Word charts — a variety that it is unusual to find in a spreadsheet but very welcome given that you can use the graphics facilities of SuperCalc 5.5 to prepare slides suitable for use as a presentation to an audience .
2 This may be too narrow a base if it is the case that pay is only one factor in determining levels of motivation .
3 6.1 Quiet enjoyment To permit the Tenant peaceably and quietly to hold and enjoy the Premises without any interruption or disturbance from or by the Landlord or any person claiming under or in trust for the Landlord [ or by title paramount ] This covenant quite often contains a provision that it is dependent upon the tenant paying the rent reserved by the lease and performing and observing the covenants on its part and the conditions contained in the lease , but these words have no practical effect , and do not render payment of the rent and performance of the covenants conditions precedent to the operation of the covenant ( Edge v Boileau ( 1885 ) 16 QB 117 ) .
4 The tenant 's adviser should be on his guard against such a provision since it is little more than a trap for the tenant , particularly since the figure specified by the landlord need not be a bona fide and genuine pre-estimate of the market rent ( Amalgamated Estates Ltd v Joystretch Manufacturing Ltd ( 1980 ) 257 EG 489 ) .
5 It is also important to remember the Chart Gallery when creating a chart as it is sometimes the only way of achieving the effect you want .
6 It demonstrated clearly to all Members of Parliament the dangers of making even inadvertent and mild statements about a trial while it is taking place .
7 ‘ We are now in a recession and it is very short-sighted of businessmen to start complaining .
8 How can History be a unity if it is also conflictual , if each action is aimed at destroying the other and results in a double negation in which the original aims of each action have been destroyed by the other ?
9 Of course it is one thing to state baldly that modern Christians are often ineffectual in their witness and live in a privatised world , cut off from the mainstream of social life , but it is quite another thing to make out a case that it is so .
10 A statement forms part of the res gestae of a case if it is made contemporaneously with or shortly after any act or occurrence in issue in the proceedings so as to form part of the same transaction .
11 ‘ It 's getting to us a bit but it 's making us even more determined .
12 She is a bit but it 's .
13 You can you can apply statistics to it a bit but it 's very unlikely the statis st statistics and what really happens will always add up in fact .
14 Yeah , there is a bit but it 's , it 's like somebody broke it , broke it , so it 's half
15 But some people were moved to tears , such as nurse Fiona Sexton , 22 , from Hackney : ‘ I cried a bit because it 's so sad .
16 Thank you we 'll just put it on the little table here , look for a bit until it 's time to put it on .
17 like that , whoop and then the second one you go whoop and down a bit and it 's , all the water splashes you in your face and that 's the same with the fi third one .
18 ‘ You do n't give a shit that it 's broken .
19 In R. v. Monopolies and Mergers Commission , ex parte Argyll Group plc Lord Donaldson MR said that courts must show ‘ a proper awareness of the needs of public administration ’ : a court should be wary of striking down a decision if it is clear that the same decision would have been made even if the decision-maker had not acted unlawfully ; or if doing so would unduly delay the conduct of government business ; or if members of the public are likely already to have relied on the challenged decision ; or if the court thinks that the applicant 's motivation in making the application was improper or vexatious or frivolous .
20 The court will set aside a decision if it is taken by someone who is not or can not be appointed as the expert .
21 One of the problems that will be encountered is that we may find words which are obviously complex but which , when we divide them into stem + affix , turn out to have a stem that it is difficult to imagine is an English word .
22 ( It was a driver and it 's now mounted in Lyle Towers because after that he could n't hit a fairway with it ! )
23 It 's a struggle as it is . ’
24 Use it as a truncheon if it is fairly short , smashing at a hand or any part of a body that comes within range as it moves towards you .
25 He added , I have to pass a sentence because it is against the law .
26 It is not as much a matter of generating meanings out of a text as it is a matter of making connections between a particular verbal text and a larger cultural text , which is the matrix or master code that the literary text both depends upon and modifies .
27 Moreover , the secrecy that bedevils British government is of such a kind that it is hard to discover the truth on matters of state power .
28 This costs £26.64 ( £29.65 in London ) , but you get a refund if it 's found to be faulty .
29 Our eyes do not wander randomly around the page when we are reading , but certain sorts of words are fixated more often than others ( O'Regan , 1979 ) , and this means that we must know in advance of a fixation where it is that we are going to look next .
30 Do not disturb a caterpillar while it is moulting or it will not be able to complete the process properly and may die .
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