Example sentences of "to it be [verb] " in BNC.
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1 | and I 've we 've taken the the old settee down to Carrie 's and moved the two seater and the armchair down this end and they flew in tonight straight up on the sofa , I said to it 's gon na be tough for a week or so but they 've got ta get used to staying on the floor , I 'm not having them on the furniture all the time cos they just absolutely ruin it ! |
2 | Whatever the resistance of this comes to it 's going to be less than fifty ohms . |
3 | The last line of the book is the father asking Janet , ‘ What do you think I am ? ’ and Janet 's response to it is written by the reader . |
4 | The closest psychological construct to it is called ‘ field independence ’ or the ‘ capacity to differentiate psychologically ’ . |
5 | In the common case of a symmetric section , the load impedance that renders the input impedance equal to it is called the characteristic impedance . |
6 | Whereas identification of an E may quite easily be aided by the introduction of a P actually applicable to a different E , to claim completeness of an E and a P when the latter neither helps to identify the former nor is applicable to it is to leave us with a construction which does nothing coherent at all . |
7 | A small battery-operated box with electrodes wired up to it is placed against the woman 's back and sends mild electrical charges to her brain , stimulating the production of endorphins , the body 's own natural painkillers . |
8 | Of course , since care management has no empirical referents the tendency to project on to it is made rather easier . |
9 | For all irrational and exploitative forms of authority , self-assertion — the pursuit by another of his own goals — is the arch sin because it is a threat to the power of the authority ; the person subject to it is indoctrinated to believe that the aims of the authority are also his , and that obedience offers the optimal chance for fulfilling oneself . |
10 | The most interesting thing about going , coming back to it is trying to work out who 's got married to who and who 's divorcing who and what baby belongs to which person . |
11 | As against this , it is possible to argue that corporate power , as exercised by management , is still ultimately rooted in , and hence legitimated by , property rights , on the ground that the structure that gives rise to it is created with the consent of the shareholders . |
12 | A special form of leasehold is the tenancy from year to year , which continues until notice to put an end to it is given by either party . |
13 | The key to it is choosing the problem correctly . |
14 | So attached are the Milanese to this symbol of their city that no building that is close to it is allowed to overtop it . |
15 | Gossels says the development and engineering plans along with a set of milestones and documentation were published along with the second snapshot towards the end of last year and sent to 50 early access members , arguing that the schedule and adherence to it is known and calculable , The next part , the Management Framework , is set for release by the end of the year . |
16 | ‘ The key to it is to develop a parental relationship ’ , he said . |
17 | Production incidental to it is identified as ‘ Co-operative Production ’ . |
18 | But the main point of going up to it is to look at the Pyrenean Museum that has been created inside . |
19 | Sex perversion or any inference to it is forbidden . |
20 | In the first place , he contests its equation with any anthropological definition of ‘ man ’ ; in the second , he argues that Sartre 's description of history as making up one ‘ History ’ with one meaning is only achieved through the exclusion of all other histories with other meanings : the totalization can only totalize if everything which remains other to it is excluded . |
21 | But the general point remains that it is to it is targeted towards a particular sector of the workforce . |
22 | It lacks a ground of its own and therefore the opportunities open to it are limited . |
23 | It is also an extremely important form of property , and rights of access to it are governed by legislation and custom . |
24 | If the rate of crime increases when the adverse social conditions which have been linked to it are becoming ameliorated , the answer must lie elsewhere : either in the failure of the criminal justice system to deliver sanctions with sufficient certainty or positiveness ( the ‘ New Right ’ analysis ) , or in changes in the availability of criminal opportunities in the environment ( administrative criminology ) . |
25 | Fleischmann has been particularly worried about possible strategic implications of their research , believing that much of the negative reactions to it are prejudiced by this and that national security interests have orchestrated attempts to suppress or trash their work . |
26 | So far as the acquiring company is concerned , the shares transferred to it are acquired at their actual value at the time of transfer , so that that forms the base value if and when they come to be disposed of . |
27 | In doing so it is inevitable that some of the negative aspects of ageing and our attitudes to it are stressed . |
28 | But the one next to it was veined with crimson and dull purple and , as Fenella touched it , she was instantly aware of a stinging pain , a boiling of hot sourness . |
29 | Then in the late fifth , or early sixth , century the settlement moved northwards ; it was smaller , of briefer duration and more dispersed , and the cemetery belonging to it was defined by Romano-British ditches . |
30 | Another street at right angles to it was uncovered in Annetwell Street , where it was lined with timber buildings of second-century date , probably belonging to the fort . |