Example sentences of "carry [adv] with the [noun] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 So the NETRHA decided to carry on with the Friern and Claybury programme in the absence of feasible alternatives .
2 He was n't prepared to be carried along with the wave and the various things that he said about Europe were completely right for what he said .
3 But organisation charts only give us the bare bones of the organisation 's structure and we should not be carried away with the idea that official descriptions tell us all .
4 I think a lot of people get carried away with the occasion and it 's actually supposed to be a very romantic day , and , you know , that 's what it was for me .
5 It 's important but I , I would n't I do n't want to er get carried away with the fact that we 're not performing well because we are performing well .
6 Nevertheless , it is dangerous to get too carried away with the similarities since they can blind even the best researchers to new observations .
7 In later years , a good deal of business was carried out with the Severn and Wye Railway Company , Hewlett supplying this trade for at least several decades .
8 His widow , Margaret , said : ‘ Alfred told me that I should carry on with the case if he died , and that is exactly what I will do . ’
9 And if you 're okay overnight then you can carry on with the pack as directed on Thursday morning
10 ‘ We are carrying on with the wedding as planned . ’
11 It may be that money worries are behind the disappearnce , but there 's no firm evidence to support that and police are carrying on with the investigation because there may yet be another explanation .
12 Ferranti carried on with the contracts because it did not want to give the purported customers an excuse not to pay back the credit .
13 For it is the kind of work that these individuals carried on with the knowledge that they were seeking to improve life on earth , that set the example for the vast mass of the human race to follow and thereby perpetuate , albeit largely unknowingly , the strengthening and augmentation of the Created God .
14 Instead of water lapping the romantic old stone walls of wharves and warehouses , palaces and towers , there is mud — a pallid dark grey mud , littered with the dunnage of long-dispersed cargoes , bits of broken packing cases , carried up with the tide and brought down again , the rusted frames of worn-out bicycles , the pathetic remnants of somebody 's pram , upside down , its upholstery all gone , motionless , futile wheels apparently beseeching something from the air .
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