Example sentences of "it was [adv] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 It was principally because they did n't perform a greenbelt function .
2 But we could tell that it was longer because of the extra tape measures it would take to get from one side to the other . ’
3 It could no more act as a ‘ watchdog ’ than a critical examiner of the actions of politicians or government because it was closely and inextricably tied to both .
4 As the heating was off it had been cold , but he had comforted himself with the thought that it was not as cold as it was outside where many of the animals were .
5 Perhaps the magic lay in the fact that it was either or both ?
6 The question for an Industrial Tribunal is not whether one of them was innocent but whether you carried out such reasonable investigation as you could and you reasonably believed it was either or both and dismissed them both because of that belief .
7 But she did n't know where it was either and soon the whole family was up on their feet looking for the source of the noise .
8 It was either because they were non-Greek speakers or because the Romans had trouble understanding the Celtic tongue .
9 It was thus that I had been able to gain some sense of the sort of place Miss Kenton had gone to live her married life .
10 It was thus that it acquired its unique form : 35 km long and about 1.6 km wide with steep sides sloping to a flat bed .
11 Although she continued to knit , and sat upright , it was thus that she felt herself ; and this self having shed its attachments was free for the strangest adventures .
12 It was thus that the classic wine-growing areas — the Camp of Tarragona and the Panadés — were expanded and the western regions re-peopled .
13 It was thus that he arrived at his figure of six hundred and twenty thousand three hundred and thirty one pounds to the overall cost of future care in this case .
14 It was soon after this incident that Sien moved in with him .
15 IT was soon after Tricia Robinson 's father died that her boss began to bully her .
16 It was soon and very unceremoniously dragged away again by the officers ’ .
17 on , it was equally if not more dreadful to him to think that this successor might treat the emirs ‘ as superiors — as Royalties ’ , thereby incurring ‘ their astonished contempt that the King 's representative — the conquering dynasty — should so behave ’ .
18 Because of this she never had any time for her own parents : my mother could n't think it was right that they 'd parted with two of their children . ’
19 In my village there had been historic upheaval over such questions as whether it was right that hymns should be sung in the House of God .
20 Coleridge rationalized the departure in his poem ‘ Reflections on having left a Place of Retirement ’ , asking whether it was right that he should live in beauty and solitude while his ‘ unnumber 'd brethren toil 'd and bled ’ in the greater world .
21 I told Kidsons that I did n't think it was right that I should seek re-election , which was coming up on 30 April , and left it at that . ’
22 If he needed to be questioned again it was right that it should be at home and with his parents present .
23 I thought that it was right that I should talk to you , try and build a better picture of Michael . ’
24 It was right that she should make it suffer for what it had done .
25 So you won , Ragu , and in retrospect I think it was right that you did .
26 However , we believe that it was right that the statement should be made in the House , from which have come the decisions that , in our opinion , have done so much to encourage the IRA through the years .
27 It was right that the poor Jewish scholar should marry the daughter of the richest local merchant , because it was unthinkable that a community which respected learning should reward its luminaries with nothing more tangible than praise .
28 But Mr Michael Fallon , the Conservative candidate , said it was right that a quarter of the receipts should go on housing while threequarters went towards repayment of debt .
29 It was rather as though Attlee or Macmillan had spent post-war autumn holidays at Saratoga Springs while eschewing any contact with the United Nations in New York .
30 Indeed , it was largely because of this stance of old-fashioned industrial unionism that he had been elected in the first place .
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