Example sentences of "[noun] [vb base] [to-vb] with the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Primary schools seem to manage with the term ‘ classroom teacher ’ and their cross-curricular approach may have much to offer the secondary curriculum . |
2 | What will happen if schools fail to comply with the recommendations remains to be seen — so far introduction of reviews has resulted in substantial voluntary initiatives for change in all Dutch medical schools . |
3 | As companies that do fall victim to computer crime prefer to deal with the problem internally , personnel security may well turn out to be the most vital component in a firm 's defences . |
4 | Since these parameters have to do with the FMS drivers , checking and setting them is described in Appendix D , FMS Drivers . |
5 | Thus , although trade with the Soviet Union would enable Latin Americans to benefit from lower prices and improved credit terms , to conserve scarce foreign exchange and , according to opinions recently expressed in Latin America , to receive better guarantees and local servicing , it is still generally the case that both public and private sector companies prefer to deal with the West . |
6 | These conventions or maxims have to do with the quantity ( or informativeness ) , the quality ( truthfulness ) , the manner ( clearness ) and relevance of conversational contributions . |
7 | By refusing to relist B's case to deal with the points undisposed of , the Court of Appeal was denying B his right to a judgment . |
8 | He says what you can see is most of the cities not only in Holland , but the whole world and of course in England have to deal with the growing of cars and it 's not only that the car is a good thing — the car has very bad things for the city as a whole . |
9 | The principles of pedagogy have to do with the craft of teaching . |
10 | Nurses in that sector have to cope with the effects on their patients of poor housing conditions and a deteriorating social fabric . |
11 | Few organisations have to cope with the range of different inputs at national , LEA and institutional level . |
12 | Nonetheless , just as computer scientists have had to solve the problem of mapping abstract functional languages onto unyielding and unhelpful hardware , so also will the EP community have to grapple with the difficulties of ‘ link-editing ’ and presenting suitable subsets of some highly abstract hypertext on conventional devices ( including plain paper ! ) . |
13 | As well as having to adapt to major changes in their status , environment , lifestyle and relationships , Elizabeth and Helen have to cope with the adjustments made by the people on whom they depend . |
14 | OUP expect to establish with the supplier the criteria which will be used to determine whether the system functions correctly and can be accepted by OUP . |
15 | The most obvious questions have to do with the elements or components of the curriculum : the things that go to make it up ( see Figure 1.1 ) . |
16 | ‘ FALLACIES of the modern worldview have to do with the conception of the world as substance or machinery , mistaking abstractions for reality , confusing origins and truth , failing to attribute feeling to things that feel , recognising ethics as exclusively anthropocentric , thinking a posteriori , objectifying facts as separated from values , reducing the complex to the simple and dividing knowledge into distinct disciplines that produce experts who are often wrong . ’ |
17 | Riley , 59 , was a former two-term Governor of South Carolina who had initiated a sales tax to assist with the financing of the education of black children . |
18 | David Tweedie , the chairman of the Accounting Standards Board , has already warned that the ASB will follow the cookbook approach if companies and their auditors continue to comply with the letter of the rules rather than with their spirit . |
19 | We shall see how stress arises as people attempt to cope with the undermining of self-confidence and self-esteem that ensues . |
20 | These will arise , whether justified or not , and may lead to resentment on the part of employees if managements fail to deal with the problems quickly . |
21 | She smiled , ‘ Do n't forget now , you 're my cousin from Neath come to help with the business , you 're big like my dad , could easily be his nephew and so long as you do n't open your mouth , it should be all right . ’ |
22 | I usually start at the walls because I find it easier to think up the general colour scheme first , but many people prefer to start with the floor because they automatically think of carpet and presume that this will be the most expensive item . |
23 | The Government intend to comply with the Commission 's directive and have an exceptionally good record of compliance with directives on environmental assessments . |
24 | Like , uh , how does WNKER Toronto hope to deal with the switch in formatting from vinyl to CD without breaking the semester 's budget on new shelving ? |
25 | And those who get past the door seem to agree with the policy . |
26 | And he propounded evidence that a great many of the ailments we have in modern society have to do with the way we construct our buildings . |
27 | New accountability processes have to grapple with the problem of legitimising managerial autonomy and discretion ( to achieve results ) with the need to give real rather than fictional accounts to the various publics with which the organisation interacts . |
28 | Furthermore children tend to identify with the parent of the same sex . |
29 | Most often associated with the school of functional sociology , these ideas have as axiomatic a pluralist integrative approach to political development , in which the centre is synonymous with authority ; and in so far as societies fail to conform with the model of integrated consensual authority , they are not properly modern . |
30 | Many publishers prefer to deal with the street booksellers rather than the formal bookshops because they are better business : they pay more , are more commercially motivated and are closer to the public . |