Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] [verb] [prep] [noun sg] with " in BNC.

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1 ONE OF the first railway privatisations of the century has finally come of age with the clearance of a unique hire purchase agreement with British Rail .
2 Whilst learning to take the rough and the smooth of rugby fortunes with a philosophic air , Townsend has already reacted to criticism with refinements to his play that have been a factor in his selection for Australia : ‘ I tend to pay heed more to criticism than to praise .
3 The early history of the BUF saw a rapidly expanding movement becoming quickly embroiled in conflict with left-wing opponents .
4 While the proportion of mentally ill among homeless people has probably not changed greatly over the past two decades , the absolute number has probably doubled in parallel with the number of homeless people .
5 Pip has never really thought about his features until this point and from then on wants to be a gentleman because he has instantly fallen in love with Estella and wants to impress her , and make her love him .
6 For the past couple of years he has also appeared in pantomime with Rolf Harris .
7 Smoking has also declined in parallel with a phased ban on advertising and use of taxes from tobacco sales to replace tobacco sponsorship of sports and arts and fund health promotion .
8 His driving , suspect in the Players ' Championship , has also improved after consultation with David Leadbetter .
9 Since 1990 she has really began to surface with work which is not for the faint hearted .
10 No , says Dusan Trancik , the Slovakian maker of seven features who has frequently got into trouble with the authorities .
11 Fortunately for his pectorals and his cranium , Mr Stallone has yet to fall in love with a woman who likes men with small busts and large brains .
12 Clearly , wealth has recently moved in tandem with the savings ratio .
13 Aye , you 'd better jump in bed with him ,
14 ‘ Perhaps I 'd better get in touch with him .
15 In fact , as we shall see , employers in the USA — particularly in the manufacturing sector where enterprise-level bargaining and large corporations predominate — have felt less need for association with other employers for negotiating purposes , while in Britain over the past two decades there has been a trend towards the adoption of company-centred industrial relations policies rather than continued adherence to the norms laid down by an association .
16 The price was about the only thing about the house that was right , but we 'd both fallen in love with it right away .
17 From published tables can be related to , and M w is calculated from the 90° scattering then corrected by multiplication with .
18 The studio almost immediately cast her in a cycle of prestigious ( if often meretricious ) ‘ women 's pictures ’ , including Edmund Goulding 's Dark Victory ( 1939 ) , which had her , in its famous climactic scene , walk upstairs to die in solitude with all the dignified serenity of an elephant trundling off to its ancestral graveyard ; Michael Curtiz 's The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex ( also 1939 ) , in which she flaunted the Virgin Queen 's ( and her own ) baldness as the ultimate emblem of great , self-abasing character acting ; and , of course , Irving Rapper 's sudsy , multi-Kleenex tearjerker Now , Voyager ( 1942 ) , in which her repressed , plain-Jane spinster blossoms overnight into chic , radiant , cigarette-tapping womanhood .
19 Hanoverian Whiggery also became more divorced from association with the cause of Dissent .
20 Although symptoms such as tachycardia and tremor are masked , sweating , a predominantly α-mediated response , appears more pronounced during hypoglycaemia with β blockade ( Molnar & Read , 1973 ; Viberti et al , 1978 ) .
21 When Hugh 's men had lifted Aldhelm 's body on to the litter , and set off down the path with it towards the Foregate , Tutilo fell in behind the sorry little procession like a mourner , and went silently step for step with them , his eyes still upon the shrouded body .
22 In the crudest sense , there are indeed ‘ young old ’ and ‘ old old ’ ; and although you can be either younger or older at any age , physical and mental disabilities do slowly cumulate on average with increasing years .
23 I do n't want to bump too hard against the plane 's fuselage in case we do actually come into contact with it .
24 The Communist Party had most to gain by combination with other groups , for with its strong discipline it could always hope to attract supporters from allied groups without losing many of its own members .
25 We 've all fallen in love with our cover picture this month , and hope you will too — it 's got such a happy , festive feel .
26 Another participant pointed out that the Northern Ireland budget over the last five years had only increased in line with inflation .
27 Fortunately for her the camera had already fallen in love with the new royal cover girl .
28 She had already fallen in love with him , her whole heart had been surrendered , but he could never know that because he would have such power over her that she would never be able to deny him her body .
29 She had already fallen in love with Matthew Preston .
30 We set off in file moving along a narrow gauge railway in pitch darkness I was trying desperately to keep in contact with the Frenchman in front of me and cursing him when he stopped suddenly , causing me to bang my face on his rucksack .
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