Example sentences of "[noun] with [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Treatment may include helping the person to regain control of the bladder with help from a community nurse or continence adviser .
2 He often inserted the catheter into his bladder with force , causing pain .
3 Really , women should not assume such familiar manners with priests .
4 American travellers became stranded in Europe and turned into expatriates or exiles in Henry James 's novels , shadowy amalgamation of foreign manners with shreds of familiar accents that were up to the narrator to decipher , but it could n't happen to her , not in 1928 , even with a crash .
5 So many of the stories were wild exaggerations , inflamed by a number of factors — the ‘ culture contact ’ between rural and urban society , personal resentment ( particularly if two women were forced to share the same kitchen ) , the strangeness of the whole situation at the start of a frightening new war , or simply as Angus Calder put it the English tendency to confuse manners with morals .
6 The low right-hand block held the boilers , the tall central structure the beam engine and the narrow left-hand building a gigantic wheel with slats that scooped the water into the river .
7 ‘ He gags the budgie so he ca n't sing and ties the hamster 's wheel with string to stop it making a noise , ’ say Helen , nine , and six-year-old Carrie Ann .
8 Because Wirral , as an urban borough with areas of high social need , was eligible for additional central funds from the Department of Environment 's Inner Area Programme , it was able to allocate funds rapidly to finance this .
9 But in practice force has been used in self-defence with commanders arguing there are too few troops to be involved in guerrilla warfare .
10 Wordsworth concludes The Prelude with tributes to his sister Dorothy , and to S. T. Coleridge , both of whom , in their different ways , helped him to resolve the personal crisis into which the events of the 1790s had led him , and I have given a short biography of each .
11 Eliot 's solution of a widespread Christian community hierarchically organized , related both to the state and individual parishes and containing intellectual leaders , owes much to Benda 's notion of clercs , as well as to the anthropologists ' stress on the connection of religion with society .
12 Sections of the catholic — nationalist population have also combined their own popular nationalism and religion with aspects of the clerical interpretation already invested in the law , particularly in the anti-abortion movement of the early 1980s .
13 As for those with a more weird taste in religious deviation , they can join an exotic religion with saffron robes .
14 All of this will have been picked up from a multitude of cues within the family — coyness in speaking about religion , sentimental talk at Christmas-time that equates religion with belief in Santa Claus , contempt for the hypocrisy ( real or imagined ) of religious officials , and the equation of religion with fanaticism and political reaction .
15 While Mr Malik hardly ever discussed religion with Robert , he spent many evenings in the La Paesana restaurant , Mitcham , going over the finer points of Islamic doctrine with Maisie .
16 All of this will have been picked up from a multitude of cues within the family — coyness in speaking about religion , sentimental talk at Christmas-time that equates religion with belief in Santa Claus , contempt for the hypocrisy ( real or imagined ) of religious officials , and the equation of religion with fanaticism and political reaction .
17 Likewise , we may not wish a budget-holder to take risks with taxpayer 's money and to ensure equity the official may need to follow formal rules rather than respond flexibly to each new case .
18 The market is less active , people are less likely to take risks with things they know nothing of in the hope of growth so perhaps the recession has affected the USM more severely than people have given credit for .
19 Actual implementation risks with OLAS were found to be significantly lower than the alternative .
20 For we will take no risks with inflation .
21 Gavyn Davies , from the investment house Goldman Sachs , thinks the Chancellor should put growth high on the agenda and take some short-term risks with inflation and the pound to ensure strong growth in 1994 .
22 Gavyn Davies , from the investment house Goldman Sachs , thinks the Chancellor should put growth high on the agenda and take some short-term risks with inflation and the pound to ensure strong growth in 1994 .
23 Mr Leigh-Pemberton , however , sounded a stark warning to the Cabinet not to take risks with inflation : ‘ We have to be very clear about the objectives of policy .
24 Now , according to group financial controller David Phillipps : ‘ All of the statutory accounts can be produced directly from the FDC system without taking risks with confidentiality . ’
25 Asthma , heart conditions , diabetes or epilepsy may expose you to special risks with watersports in the heat .
26 Every day the Profitboss is taking risks with people and company money .
27 He was taking risks with Piper .
28 I know but but eat custard with meringue .
29 Although 2/4 remained on the island for several more weeks , they were constantly embroiled in unsatisfactory skirmishes with natives supported by Japanese machine-gun teams .
30 The United States decided that isolation with Israel from the consensus of the whole world community was too high a price to pay .
  Next page