Example sentences of "[noun sg] [to-vb] with " in BNC.

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1 What you need is the willingness to sit with yourself and discover this .
2 A subordinate class , such as the working class will , by definition , be low on economic resources and this will reproduce its subordination ; but it may also possibly generate a collective ethic to cope with adverse circumstances and so reproduce itself in this way according to a common cultural identity .
3 ‘ So it 's down to a combination of continued good Presbyterian attitudes to housekeeping and our taking advantage of the recession to continue with our policy of expansion and growth . ’
4 While there has been a world recession to contend with on top of the problems the UK would otherwise have faced since 1979 , public choice theorists would not be surprised that the Conservative government has sought to minimize the level of reported unemployment .
5 Dublin may have a healthy homegrown vibe , but it wo n't produce a hybrid post-dance noise to compare with the messed up trance of , say , Happy Mondays .
6 The letter with my name in English on the envelope , a Moroccan stamp , and a list of requests from my family for a white bridal veil to go with my sister 's wedding dress , surgical stockings for my brother and a china dish for my mother .
7 to obtain sufficient information to confirm your willingness to proceed with the transaction ; and
8 Karajan has always been famous for his willingness to breathe with players — wind players in particular — something that many conductors neglect to do .
9 It was the only Italian name I could think of in a hurry and I did n't have the nerve to put on the right accent to go with it . ’
10 Women at work have a triple difficulty to cope with .
11 There will be a liaison judge in the Crown Court who will see it as part of his function to liaise with the lay magistrate and to meet them and to discuss erm such matters as erm sentencing principles with them .
12 According to Regulation 8(2) of these regulations a driver has the overall responsibility to proceed with due regard to the safety of other users of the road subject to the direction of any police constable etc .
13 In my own case I had been taught by Okely to avoid the split between subjectivism and an objective reality , but I had no preparation to contend with the changes which the field experience created in me .
14 Peking officials now seek to excuse the June atrocities by claiming — all too credibly — that they had neither the resources nor the expertise to cope with the escalating civil disorder culminating in the Tiananmen Square assault .
15 Both the head and the educational psychologist stressed the positive value of Cedars and the likely problems for Balbinder if he stayed on at his present school , which they told her did not have the expertise to cope with his needs .
16 If they meet the requirements of the above list , the dissemination and support of their material should be made possible by others with sufficient expertise to cope with it .
17 We have got the expertise to cope with the changing face of local government .
18 The main aim of their eight-week-long visit is to learn enough to set up a consultancy centre at the university as the Czechs , unused to the rising unemployment they now face , do not have the knowhow to cope with such upheaval .
19 It is easy to see why Elizabeth feels this way , and needs a lot of tact and patience to cope with what she perceives as her husband 's unreasonable childishness .
20 A true performer needs patience to cope with all the waiting in the wings and general hanging about while some director chappie takes his pick of the talent .
21 At the same time they try to make sure that no other males get the opportunity to mate with their own female .
22 It will rarely be the case that either an animal or a human will be provided with the opportunity to mate with an absolutely ideal member of the opposite sex .
23 for Scottish Homes next year to provide more money to cope with dampness and homelessness .
24 Ronnie , who had carrot-red hair to go with it , had blushed pillarbox red .
25 The pattern recognition technique enables the computer to cope with a certain amount of operator error , minor misspellings make no difference .
26 My little stand to go with the microphone , I had it here probably fallen in my handbag .
27 Yes , so I thought , I might erm , cos I bought a jumper , I bought a pale blue jumper to go with the flowery leggings , but , I 've decided I 'll take blue jumper back , cos , although it would be alright with plain white trousers I thought that 's all I would wear it with , I would n't wear it with anything else , so , I think I 'll change that , if I get the dark blue leggings like Jamie , then I 'll get the striped jumper the same .
28 I know , but you could have a , yes but you could have a jumper to go with the trousers , lilac 's nice
29 We were getting more mileage out of an asset we already owned and it gave the business a wider base to cope with fluctuations in any part of it .
30 Finally , fears that fundholders would encourage referrals to private clinics to avoid a charge on their budgets seem to be unfounded , certainly as far as these aggregate data are concerned , and there was only limited evidence that fundholders were making use of their freedom to contract with private hospitals for outpatient services for NHS patients .
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