Example sentences of "[verb] with it [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 This would have been impossible with the yoke-harness , because as soon as the horse begins to pull with it the neck-strap presses on the animal 's windpipe and thus tends not only to restrict the flow of blood to its head , but also to suffocate it !
2 In an age when politicians , journalists , estate agents and even advertising executives claim to be ‘ professionals ’ , it is easy to forget that the description once carried with it a certain cachet .
3 This new law was put into practice two weeks before my son 's death , and carried with it a maximum sentence of five years ' imprisonment .
4 In an ideal world the choice of harmonizing instrument would depend on what was most suitable for the particular project envisaged and carried with it the greatest prospect of successful implementation .
5 The tariff policy therefore carried with it the last hope of consolidating the Empire and the last hope of reversing the drift into class politics ; as a pessimist , Law saw further ahead than most of his contemporaries , and events proved him to be more nearly right than they were .
6 Branson 's fierce attack on ‘ predatory pricing ’ carried with it the implied threat of another anti-trust suit against British Airways in the American courts .
7 The deconstruction of the old view of photography , as inexorably tied to " reality " , may bring with it a necessary sharpening of attention to the claims of all media representations .
8 Secondly , there is a fundamental connection between critical reasoning of this kind , and the idea that the process of higher education can bring with it a new level of intellectual freedom for the student .
9 Equally , the current trend of research councils to favour formal training , an important component of which for history will be computing and methodology , should bring with it a fuller measure of recognition of the skills acquired by the computer-using historian ( Denley 1990 ; Kruse 1991 ) .
10 However , it is likely that a quantitative shift from elite to mass higher education , such as has happened in the USA and Japan , will bring with it a qualitative change in the undergraduate curriculum .
11 It has often been observed that , whilst old age is not an illness , it does bring with it an increased susceptibility to illness and disease .
12 If the fact of ownership does not carry with it a moral right of control , then the property rights justification of corporate power collapses and the objection in the previous paragraph ( and the one before ) becomes irrelevant .
13 Any synthetic chemical will carry with it a small percentage of undesirable substances which are not found in the essential oil .
14 The flamboyant ritual celebration of male bellicosity and the male collectivity among the Shavante appears to carry with it a corresponding devaluation of women , and indeed to be built upon it .
15 Glen volunteered to supervise the distribution of his work in Persia , and to circulate with it a new edition of the Persian translation of the New Testament by Henry Martyn [ q.v . ] .
16 As I was sending a copy of the new book to all those slimmers who were mentioned in the Complete Hip and Thigh Diet , I decided to include with it a second questionnaire .
17 At the same time there is now a more direct intervention in the nature of a school 's educational work through the introduction of the National Curriculum , bringing with it a greater concern for monitoring .
18 On the other hand , the chance of a ‘ surprise ’ Conservative victory ( bringing with it a soaring pound and a quick cut to interest rates , which would in turn boost the economy ) gave rise to the thought that the index might go up by 300 points .
19 From time to time a little breeze , trapped in the courtyard , eddied and gusted in their direction , bringing with it the first hint of the sweet smell of decay .
20 The flowers were tight budded but one was beginning to open and a transitory evocation of summer came to her , bringing with it an old anxiety .
21 It is fortunately in the hands of such a man as Captain Vidal , R.N. , who has steadily devoted himself , during a long period of ill-health , to complete this unpopular work , and to connect with it a minute examination of the Canary Islands . ’
22 What is more , the cultivation of the idea of emperorship brought with it a renewed interest in the rich sources of the Roman law .
23 In fact , that situation is even more confusing than it may seem from this account because a third cultural trauma , this time representing the change from cultivation ( of plants ) to herding and pastoralism also occurred and brought with it a great intensification , not of weaning as happened with cultivation , nor of the phallic mutilations which accompanied hunting , but of toilet-training .
24 The shift of focus from the individual text to literature in general brought with it a new awareness of the different nature of different types of discourse about literature , and of the different ways of treating literature implied by them .
25 The method of composition used by the painters brought with it a new element of ease and fluidity .
26 Roy Porter maintains , however , that in the eighteenth century the growth of fashion brought with it a new standard of beauty which emphasized the artificial , so that many Georgians feared a civilization of facades .
27 In a way the actual liquidation brought with it a curious sense of relief .
28 For the purposes of this chapter , this question of chronology makes only one difference , and that is in assessing how long the two separate procedural regimes lasted ; how long therefore the use of a trust brought with it a distinct advantage compared with the use of a modal legacy .
29 Increased life expectancy has brought with it a major burden ( the word is here used advisedly ) and responsibility in the care of those in an advanced state of mental and physical decline .
30 A chink of light from behind the thick curtain told him that it was morning , and the prospect brought with it a deep sense of foreboding .
  Next page