Example sentences of "it [adv] [adj] [coord] " in BNC.
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1 | He found it incredibly rewarding and had a couple of momentous experiences of such excitement that he tried to recreate the excitement instead of going back to what caused it ( the old Orgasmic-Goal orientation — see Dr Ruth , pages 12 to 461 ) , so he gave up for a few years . |
2 | ( Unfortunately , this sometimes makes it rather worthy and less punchy than her writing on women . ) |
3 | ‘ I thought it rather spiteful but the Prince ordered me to burn them . |
4 | Katy watched as Grandma wound it slowly round and round and the ball of wool grew bigger and bigger . |
5 | Since Plato ( dreamed that he ) saw Socrates most days , and this was among the most vivid and consistent of all his experiences ( dreams ? ) , and since Socrates said things which he , Plato , had not thought of before and which sometimes surprised him , Plato found it most consistent and convenient to ’ believe ’ that Socrates really did exist . |
6 | I have recently started reading Woodworker magazine and find it most interesting and informative ; thank you for an excellent publication . |
7 | For himself , he did not find the piece as graceful as could be wished , but Alice seemed to find it most enjoyable and had giggled over its charms ever since . |
8 | They , likewise , would find it most unusual and uncongenial if they were expected to devote themselves to constraining and criticizing a Conservative Government . |
9 | This , coupled with the corruption and favouritism of many of the officials who administered it , made it widely unpopular and led to much evasion of the obligations it imposed . |
10 | He pushed it gently open and looked in . |
11 | We have mentioned very little about harmonic paths in minor keys , but those with a sound harmonic upbringing will find it somewhat repetitive and superfluous to go over the whole ground again . |
12 | I do n't know how we escaped it so much but we have you see . |
13 | I know this is really putting on you , but … well , I would appreciate it so much and will recompense you in any way I can . ’ |
14 | I 've thought about it so much and I feel it must and can be something wonderful for all of us . |
15 | and we enjoyed it so much and it was only ten pound for ten days , |
16 | Even these statistics palled to insignificance a few years later when cocaine joined with heroin in the hard drugs scene and the high value of low bulk concentrated drugs made it so profitable and easy to smuggle . |
17 | The plain truth is that I once twisted my knee after falling down a ridiculously narrow flight of stairs at a crowded party in a terraced house in Highgate , and I found it so comforting and indeed so peculiarly elegant to lean on a good stout walking stick during the weeks that followed this mishap that I continued to do so long after my leg had returned to normal . |
18 | They er well I think constitutionally it 's very difficult and this is why there is now in a similar sense as why I suggested it to you as a subject , because not only it was er a very emotional story of a glamorous young woman saying I ca n't cope with being treated by the media and other people , I 'm going to retreat but what made it so historic and therefore the treatment of it 's so interesting , was that it presented such an extraordinary constitutional position |
19 | we had a lot of affection for it really and , I mean we 've had it so long and it was the first furniture we had when we married |
20 | I do n't know if he meant to hit it so slow but who cares ? . |
21 | But why was it so damp and cold here then ? |
22 | Coffee was a nauseous substitute concocted from acorns ; bread had already been rationed by the beginning of 1915 to about 2 Ibs a week , and goodness knows what was added to the flour to make it so grey and gritty ! |
23 | I 'm surprised to find it so quiet and peaceful , ’ Julie said as Laura sat down on the bench once more . |
24 | For instance , after she had said I would have remained in ignorance , the tree opens wisdoms way though secret she retire , the word secret catches up almost by a mechanical verbal train of association the thought and on it perhaps secret and then all these uneasy feelings that perhaps God 's so far away , or he was n't watching , or in some way or other he did n't actually see . |
25 | It makes it less audacious and less entertaining than the Eye , of course , except for the literary and dramatic reviews . |
26 | The programs that have brought typesetting to the desk top have also made it less laborious and costly than ever before to design an entirely new type-face . |
27 | The use or significance of ‘ stills ’ and long shots in this context is that they tend to lessen the impact of the coverage , making it less attractive and exciting , thus diminishing , so the argument goes , the likelihood of imitation . |
28 | In the letter , Mr Lilley says : ‘ I propose a three-pronged course of action which would focus the benefit more closely on the long-term sick , make it less generous and make it taxable . ’ |
29 | Should I put it together first and then |
30 | Unfortunately she now clings to me all the time and I find it terribly embarrassing and uncomfortable . |