Example sentences of "[vb -s] with [noun pl] " in BNC.
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1 | He plans to complete extensions to their £400,000 home at Denham , Bucks , where he still lives with children Matthew , 12 , and Lauren , 10 . |
2 | she lives with scars |
3 | In larger part , however , it probably lies with matters of definition . |
4 | The problem lies with systems of universal education which pretend that they are in the business of educating everybody to the limits of their potential , while hypocritically and determinedly doing the opposite . |
5 | Whilst byelaws therefore go some way to control fish trying odours from existing fish and chip shops , the primary most effective control still lies with planners to ensure that new premises , or those where a change of use to a fish and chip shop is contemplated , are sited where they will cause the least irritation to local residents , perhaps siting them together with other shops . |
6 | Is not the essential difference between Government policies and those of the Opposition that the Government 's prime concern lies with patients ' interests , while Opposition Members ' prime concern is to keep happy the unions that pay and sponsor them ? |
7 | Few would deny that the answer to the bishop 's question lies with alternatives three and four . |
8 | The initiative still lies with governments , parties , political leaders . |
9 | The real power lies with warlords such as Arkan , leader of the battle-hardened ‘ Tigers ’ , who have turned their attentions to northern Bosnia after ‘ liberating ’ towns in Croatia with such ruthless efficiency . |
10 | The National Security Council , they insist , hums with meetings on just this , but the meetings can not get very far until more is known about how the post-war world looks . |
11 | My mind hums with questions . |
12 | But before we get to this point Griffith has given us what a reviewer describes as Millet-like scenes of rural labour and urban scenes in which great wealth alternates with breadlines and poverty . |
13 | Publishers now accept novels which are composed of a series of short , interlinked stories , novels where prose narrative alternates with poems and — perhaps most interestingly — the epistolary novel has been resurrected , along with the novel of fragments , where every page contains a separate ‘ statement ’ that is linked to every other statement through place , character and feeling . |
14 | The contemporary primary school , because of its small size and the daily contact which it has with parents , is in a unique position to offer a comprehensive educational/social service . |
15 | At the highest levels of attainment in developed societies , like postgraduate research fellowships , or master classes in the arts , this is exactly what does happen — just as it always has with farmers , hunters , mothers , shamans , poets , and makers of things tangible or mental . |
16 | of a home and a family that a woman has with children , you 've got no right to criticise |
17 | At first the simple machines available could only detect down a few inches , and — amongst other operating difficulties — encounters with tufts of grass caused them to constantly give off false signals . |
18 | Wade Doak , Encounters with Whales and Dolphins |
19 | In Britain 's candle market — worth about £20 million a year — it vies with imports from Holland , Belgium and Germany , and with cheap products from China . |
20 | Heinrich Neuhaus , the great teacher , performs a selection of the Préludes with a civilised warmth , authority of experience , and conviction of phrasing , whilst the disc finishes with performances from the composer 's son-in-law , Vladimir Sofronitski . |
21 | But this image of autonomy and of the self can be threatening , too , to women who do have a strong allegiance to feminism ; and the threat intersects with assumptions that have been made in some feminist discourse about who is or is not ‘ really ’ a feminist . |
22 | There is also a large and venerable literature on the nature and purposes of higher education , which rings with names such as Newman , Veblen , Ortega y Gasset , and Jaspers [ see Powell 's bibliography ( 1966 , 1971 ) , and there have been many more recent examples but such writing likewise tends to be rather general , and only by extension addresses the question of what is to be taught in curricular terms ; but see Goodlad 1976 ; Barnett 1985 ] . |
23 | describes this motion , I wo n't use it but it rhymes with rowlocks . |
24 | A family of C/EBP-related factors interacts with IL-6REs in the promoter regions of several acute-phase genes ( Hpx , Hp , CRP ) ( 19–21 ) . |
25 | Chapter 6 examines the way in which studying physics interacts with students ' sense of identity , and looks at how this differs for male and female students . |
26 | Gibberellin , shown to be necessary for continued growth of dodder vine tips in aseptic cultures , also interacts with cytokinins and auxins in the growth of subapical segments ; it augments their effects . |
27 | However , it also affects how one individual interacts with others and so is often confused with aspects of a horse 's temperament . |
28 | Extremely enters into no further direct interaction — it exerts its semantic influence henceforth only ‘ through ’ fast ; it is fast that directly interacts with cars . |
29 | The Active Microwave Instrument radar system , built by Marconi Space Systems , is significant because it can be used over land or ocean : it will return vital information about how the wind interacts with waves . |
30 | A glutton 's gross body squats with eyes bulging from its face , suffocated with vast quantities of food forced into his mouth . |