Example sentences of "[adj] [to-vb] [adv] with the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | A full council meeting is due to go ahead with the formality of passing the decision taken in January by members of Durham County Council 's social services committee . |
2 | As he waxed into an eloquent period , he would realize the absurdity of his situation or the humbug of his pleading and be overcome with internal laughter , a laughter so vast that on occasion it left him too weak to go on with the speech . |
3 | I am a Labour supporter with many friends carrying cards , and , despite having observed the ‘ anti-Labour virulence ’ of the SNP , I do want Labour to come together with the Nats , the Liberals , the Greens , the Unions , the churches , the mosques , the synagogues , Uncle Tom Cobbley and all . |
4 | While West Germany , for example , was willing to go along with the proposal ( but only if there was a joint system of ECSC subsidy financing ) , the net importers of coal within the Six — France , Italy and the Netherlands — were totally hostile to the notion of national contributions to a joint financing policy . |
5 | Revealing details of Iraq 's latest assurances delivered on March 20 , Rolf Ekeus , head of the joint UN and International Atomic Energy Agency ( IAEA ) special commission on Iraq , told a press conference in New York the same day that his commission was " satisfied there are undertakings that the Iraqis are willing to go along with the destruction [ of ] capabilities " which they had not previously agreed to destroy . |
6 | ‘ We are not prepared to go ahead with the Lord Chancellor 's proposals about fixed fees . |
7 | Scientists at the Met Office are prepared to go along with the US plan . |
8 | Some candidates were unhappy about the selection process , claiming the region wanted someone more willing to fit in with the council 's corporate stance , than head a professional service . |
9 | people , is not , are not just opting out of marriage , but they 're not prepared to put up with the situation , |
10 | There are very few people in whom a light trance can not be induced should they wish it and provided they are willing to co-operate fully with the therapist . |
11 | There were none the less in the later eighteenth century a number of rulers and ministers in Europe who were prepared to break radically with the past , to override vested interests and disregard deep-rooted traditions in the interests of the States they ruled . |
12 | Bobby Robson said : ‘ I spoke to Bryan and he declared himself fit and willing to join up with the party . |
13 | This is excellent news for soaring in thermals and it appeared to be virtually impossible to stall even with the stick fully back in a really well-banked turn . |
14 | I say may be , because cask-conditioned beer is being reinstated so fast in so many pubs that it is becoming almost impossible to keep up with the total . |
15 | But I fancy that England is content to get on with the war , and that things take a more practical turn at home . |
16 | By all accounts , William senior was not easy to get on with the turnover of partners in the early years of the practice was rapid , until he met his match in one Major Faulks in 1905 who not only outlived him , but stayed with the firm as a consultant until 1965 when he finally retired — at the age of 90 . |
17 | A group of businessmen and politicians decided on Sept. 21 to carry on with the referendum proposal and on Sept. 26 began collecting signatures in favour of the referendum . |
18 | Although Newcastle is having to run very hard to catch up with the mechanics of community care , Roycroft thinks that in terms of the spirit of the act , the city is already way ahead . |
19 | This week Austin , Texas-based UniSQL Inc is supposed to come up with the world 's first heterogeneous database management system supporting both relational and object-oriented databases . |
20 | He left the club in a financial purge at the end of 1954–55 but was invited back in 1969 to help out with the groundstaff . |
21 | I was trying to teach him French , as he was finding it hard to keep up with the stream of orders and commands being issued by the staff . |
22 | The old and infirm who were too feeble to keep up with the band were left behind to die . |
23 | The person in the centre who is most likely to link up with the systems verifier is the SCOTVEC co-ordinator . |
24 | Do n't expect it to be as powerful as a conventional grill though , and it 's likely to operate only with the door closed . |
25 | 4.26 It is not possible to deal fully with the question of tax . |
26 | Now I , they could , erm one thing that I found b b b b picked up from doing my own reading and studying was that it 's always good to go through with the customer step by step which is to a certain extent what we do do |
27 | It is useful to draw up with the teacher concerned a list of points to concentrate on , both during the recording and at the subsequent playback . |
28 | But if you can not afford to leave , might it not be better to put up with the treatment that you have received rather than becoming unemployed ? |
29 | It 's getting a bit late to clear up with the sun . |
30 | Outliners have developed nicely over recent years and this program is sure to keep up with the trends as they develop . |