Example sentences of "[adj] with [art] [noun pl] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | An old symptom of restless legs in bed had returned and this with the ailments from indignation over her husband 's desertion led to Staphisagria LM1 . |
2 | One woman said : ‘ They are obviously doing this with the children in mind . |
3 | The spectator in movement will see one mass protrude over another with the changes of image accelerated for people passing in cars — a kind of reality fixed in a rapidly changing life . |
4 | Both these formulations are consistent with the definitions of pragmatics as " meaning minus semantics " or as the contribution of context to language understanding . |
5 | In my Bill , for which I seek a Second Reading today , the provision is that Parliament should be elected by the single transferable vote in the first instance , but thereafter , in subsequent elections , Parliament should be free to determine its own electoral system as long as that is consistent with the principles of proportionality . |
6 | General SVQs offer the chance to provide such a range of programmes in Scotland : a good case in point is the new general SVQ in arts and social sciences , which is entirely consistent with the proposals for SCOTCERT . |
7 | Reductions in morbidity were consistent with the findings for mortality , but fewer data were available . |
8 | This suggests that its stress drop was relatively high , which is consistent with the frequencies of vibration recorded , which were high compared to those of the Lleyn earthquake . |
9 | Since it was impossible to envisage the use of nuclear weapons in any way consistent with the laws of war , and since great and apparently law-abiding Powers possessed and threatened to use them , they must be held to be simply beyond the scope of international law , |
10 | And at the lowest level in the EC , they are also fully consistent with the prospects for recovery this year . ’ |
11 | Whether this is true in developed countries is yet to be seen : although Ellison 's 1932 study in the United Kingdom is consistent with the results in figure 1 , it preceded immunisation and antibiotics and hence is not comparable in 1992 . |
12 | Second , there was the need to construct a professional scholarly stance upon which to build modes of training consistent with the kinds of sensibility which would enable critical evaluation , not only of literature , but of fellow professionals . |
13 | But the former was impossible with the twins in tow and the latter unthinkable given the length of time he 'd have to wait for one on a Sunday . |
14 | It is easy with the advantages of hindsight to think of the political structure of eighteenth-century England , with all its defects , as the best in Europe . |
15 | In America today modernity as a term synonymous with the problems of life in the advanced societies has become almost a cliche . |
16 | The international trend is towards an ever greater degree of devolution ; here the tendency has been to centralise , and the issues of autonomy , which most locals want are confused with the mechanics of finance . |
17 | When I was eyeball-to-eyeball with the humiliations of puberty , my greatest hero was skiffler Lonnie Donegan . |
18 | Oh right are these of , what did you have , is that what you had before one of these with the bits of carrot on |
19 | There would be biscuits and little cakes galore ( including gingerbread men and chocolate fancies iced with the initials of bride and groom ) to flank the towering tiers of the wedding cake . |
20 | Gray 's ‘ Elegy ’ , of course , can be read as a lament for the undeveloped mind : ‘ But knowledge to their eyes her ample page / Rich with the spoils of time did ne'er unroll … |
21 | The one drawback for the club is that with no tickets on sale on the day they could lose out financially . |
22 | The situation is quite similar therefore to that with the verbs of perception , which explains why Kruisinga and Erades ( 1960 : 366 ) have pointed out that " the perception or causing is thought of as happening simultaneously with what is perceived or caused " . |
23 | Wherever they go they are escorted by a vast armada of local dignitaries , including the Lord Lieutenant , the Mayor or Mayoress , complete with the chains of office , the Chief Constable of Police and every last member of the town council . |
24 | This time the four definitive gricers ' bibles of the time come in one small , hardbacked ( and thus very easily pocketed ) volume with many pictures and full shed lists ( complete with the names of Loco Superintendents and Chief Mechanical Engineers ? ) which would have been important information for spotters of the time . |
25 | One of those who had attended the initial meeting in September 1967 , an independent radical Matt O'Leary , had been dissatisfied with the aims of NICRA . |
26 | The recent price rises and the subsequent decline in general standards of living had left whole sections of the urban population dissatisfied with the results of reform . |
27 | Good with the kids at school , too . |
28 | Both the City and the CBI are still unhappy with the clauses in spite of some changes from the original draft , as they feel the legislation will make it harder for companies to communicate with analysts , fund managers and other City representatives . |
29 | Now , almost sic years after presentation , this patient is alive and well with no signs of recurrence . |
30 | In seemed that Honda was therefore able to get the benefits from the relationship between the companies , without becoming involved with the responsibilities of ownership . |