Example sentences of "in [noun] [conj] it [vb -s] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The club Choice Brisa has always been one of our favourite hotels in Ibiza because it has everything that Club guests are looking for .
2 A new State is bound by the rules of customary international law in existence when it acquires Statehood .
3 But he has also discovered that the Gorbachev magic has not worked in Romania as it has elsewhere in Eastern Europe .
4 I would emphasize first , here speaking as one who has in the past given evidence on behalf of the Government , that the value of the scrutiny process is in part that it forces those with more direct power to consider their positions and their arguments carefully and to defend them in the face of public questioning by a Committee whose members may have long experience of the subject-matter involved .
5 California bears the brunt of illegal migration , in part because it receives nearly half the Mexicans coming across the border each year .
6 The ‘ executive ’ power today is important in part because it carries with it such wide powers of initiation of legislation .
7 The Pigou-Friedman view that competitive market economies tend to gravitate towards a state of overall full employment is now such a firmly entrenched proposition in macroeconomics that it has almost gained the status of an axiom .
8 He added that he would be raising the matter in Parliament when it reconvenes .
9 ‘ It helps to be a woman and I can exploit that when it suits because there are so few women in Parliament and it concerns a lot of people .
10 With the Swiss themselves it is a great favourite as one of the most varied and beautiful walking areas in the country ; in addition when it comes to food , the country towns and inns of the Emmental enjoy an exceptional reputation even for Switzerland , a reputation that one tends to link with the Emmental farming communities ' repute as the foremost pioneers of Swiss agriculture .
11 Launching a report on the changing face of England over the past 50 years , Burton called on the government to target the 150,000 hectares of derelict land in cities before it allows more building in the countryside .
12 I mean , most people are in an absolute state of terror in exams and it comes across .
13 Counter-intuitively , keeping imports low may boost France 's trade deficit in manufactures because it prevents French firms specialising in what they do best .
14 It happens in religion and it happens in politics .
15 Growth is obviously preferred by people in organizations because it reduces conflict to manageable proportions ( Pfeffer 1981 ) .
16 Recognising that the integrity of the learning process applies as much to adults in schools as it does to children .
17 Such may possibly have been the motive behind the creation of the muftilik of Cyprus , but the case for the argument seems stronger in isolation than it does when set against the fact that by 979/1571 the creation of such joint muderris/muftiliks appears to have become quite a common practice .
18 The easiest is ‘ Wanda ’ with large purple-red flowers for many weeks in spring and it has a hose-in-hose version .
19 The top Irish and Australians also begin their careers in Flanders and it shows in the way they ride .
20 Pragmatism might be less radical in practice than it appears to be in theory .
21 Eataine 's control of the straits of Lothern makes it unique in Ulthuan because it straddles both the Inner and Outer Kingdoms .
22 A British Cox 's apple may have been sprayed 12 times and dipped in fungicide before it reaches your fruit bowl .
23 For example if a person who has £3,000 capital receives a monthly pension of £200 paid into their bank account , this should not be assessed as an increase in savings unless it remains unspent at the time the next payment is due .
24 The kind of limitations imposed by restrictions of full-time caring are not normal to someone in midlife but it takes courage to change the pattern once the need to be restricted has passed .
25 The further into the future the perceived crisis , the more the chief executive will need to rely on introducing some flexibility into the corporate strategy to facilitate a change in direction in future if it becomes necessary .
26 Bearing in mind that it takes approximately 12 weeks from planting to flowering , it is possible to grow bulbs of many species and varieties to flower at the same time for a spectacular display , and also plant for a succession of flowers if potting up is carefully timed .
27 If this is the case , the changes of the past 30 years may be the first signs of a return to the more traditional population distribution of pre-industrial Britain , but it must also be borne in mind that it takes a very long time to shift major population patterns , and that the present trends may only be a veneer on an underlying and more permanent structure .
28 ‘ So far everything that we 've done we 've done keeping in mind that it has to be played live .
29 Argument has been addressed to me as to how that sum should fall to be represented in the damages awarded , bearing in mind that it has been substantially discharged by an interim payment and that it will not inure to any log term benefit of the plaintiff .
30 These opinions will then be borne in mind when it comes to planning future health and social care policies .
  Next page