Example sentences of "[adj] [to-vb] [adv prt] with the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 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 .
2 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 .
3 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 .
4 Scientists at the Met Office are prepared to go along with the US plan .
5 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 .
6 people , is not , are not just opting out of marriage , but they 're not prepared to put up with the situation ,
7 Bobby Robson said : ‘ I spoke to Bryan and he declared himself fit and willing to join up with the party .
8 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 .
9 But I fancy that England is content to get on with the war , and that things take a more practical turn at home .
10 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 .
11 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 .
12 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 .
13 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 .
14 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 .
15 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 .
16 The old and infirm who were too feeble to keep up with the band were left behind to die .
17 The person in the centre who is most likely to link up with the systems verifier is the SCOTVEC co-ordinator .
18 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
19 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 .
20 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 ?
21 It 's getting a bit late to clear up with the sun .
22 Outliners have developed nicely over recent years and this program is sure to keep up with the trends as they develop .
23 Outliners have developed nicely over recent years and this program is sure to keep up with the trends as they change .
24 Alison Norman in her challenging discussion paper suggests very basic origins for ageism : ‘ We have , after all , an animal inheritance and it is animal instinct to challenge and destroy the leader of the herd when his strength begins to fail and to abandon to their fate animals which are too weak to keep up with the rest . ’
25 During this period of numbness , people are perfectly able to carry on with the practicalities of living .
26 She is nevertheless perfectly happy to go out with the guns and take the boys .
27 The CPP , which was happy to go along with the election , seems averse to the idea of losing it .
28 Now going back to this handicraft , although I said I really did n't want to be committed to all the meetings , I 'm quite happy to carry on with the handicraft , providing you do n't expect me to turn up at every meeting .
29 Individuals who are reluctant to go along with the sentiments expressed in a collective discussion may be castigated as unduly kaingli , ‘ jealous ’ , or kongit , ‘ possessive ’ , of their spouses , an infringement of the legitimate autonomy of the latter .
30 I have argued elsewhere that Pound was prepared to take instruction , as well as to give it ; that when he first came to London in 1908 , he was looking for masters to whom he might apprentice himself ; that he found them in the Irishman W.B. Yeats and the maverick Englishman Ford Madox Ford ( whose professionalism about writing still denies him in England the recognition that he gets abroad ) ; and ( so I have speculated , though I know it can not be proved ) that Pound sought the same relationship with another Englishman , Laurence Binyon , who was too cagey to go along with the idea .
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