Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] with [art] [noun] ['s] " in BNC.

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1 I remember I looked at the pile of Billy 's goods and chattels which were supposed to fit inside a twelve-by-six-foot room and saying : ‘ I came with a Sainsbury 's carrier — and I had trouble filling that . ’
2 ‘ The time I spent with the O'Brien 's was a great education .
3 For purely practical purposes , I deal with the artists ' money for recording and touring expenses .
4 From The Childhood , and even more from some conversations I recorded with the poet 's second cousin ( T. Trehame Thomas ) in 1966–7 , there are hints that Mrs Thomas 's family proudly preserved the memory of Alderman Townsend and his descendants : the Tedmans at a vicarage in Much Birch , near Hereford ; another great-uncle at Limpley Stoke near Bath with an interest in the development of Edward 's French grammar ; and many more who had either been abroad and returned to moderate affluence in the Border counties ( according to Mr T. T. Thomas 's recollections ) or had settled abroad in Africa or in the USA , like Edward 's aunt Margaret .
5 What I do in approaching him thus I do with the king 's goodwill .
6 ‘ Well , I guess I agree with the committee 's original view that we should not put any major new investment in the UK , ’ Klepner replied , knowing full well that this line would be supported by Mueller and most of the Americans around the table .
7 As the Minister knows , I agree with the Government 's even-handed attitude towards Yugoslavia thus far .
8 I agree with the Childminders ' Association on that .
9 I meddle with no tradesmen 's matters nor women 's matters .
10 I meddle with no tradesmen 's matters nor women 's matters .
11 I meddle with no tradesmen 's matters nor women 's matters but with the awl .
12 I meddle with no tradesmen 's matters nor women 's matters .
13 I meddle with no tradesmen 's matters nor women 's matters but with the awl .
14 I meddle with no tradesmen 's matters
15 I meddle with no tradesmen 's matters nor women 's matters but with awl .
16 I meddle with no tradesmen 's matters nor women 's matter but with awl .
17 I meddle with no tradesmen 's matter
18 I meddle with no tradesmen 's matters nor women 's matters but with the awl .
19 I meddle with no tradesmen 's matter nor women 's matter but with awl .
20 I meddle with no tradesmen 's matter nor women 's matter but with awl I am indeed sir a surgeon to all shoes .
21 I start with the defendant 's first two points , that is to say , if there are to be side letters they have to be incorporated into the main agreement , and these were not incorporated .
22 Four days on , I sat with the Sheikha 's brother , the boy 's uncle , on the bay-window couch .
23 Require subsidiary and related companies to establish and implement environmental policies which accord with the Group 's policy and principles .
24 A devotee praying before the idol and gazing at the God 's face is thus influenced by an electro-magnetic field which interacts with the devotee 's own bioenergy field .
25 Coming out in stages , it provides Emissary , a user-managed client-based archival application , and a separate automated system-managed hierarchical file migration application , both of which integrate with the firm 's Inspire II optical jukeboxes and library management software .
26 Coming out in stages , it provides Emissary , a user-managed client-based archival application , and a separate automated system-managed hierarchical file migration application , both of which integrate with the firm 's Inspire II optical jukeboxes and library management software .
27 The employment of women with small children or dependent relatives will inevitably give rise to situations which interfere with the nurse 's attendance at work .
28 This will be explained in Chapter 13 which deals with the buyer 's remedies .
29 Thus Bond Men Made Free by Rodney Hilton ( London 1973 ) , which deals with the peasants ' revolt of 1381 , would be classified in the column of the fourteenth century , and the row of , say , ‘ Social Structure ’ ; and The Hungry Mills by Norman Longmate ( London 1978 ) which describes the Lancashire cotton famine of 1861–65 , would appear in the column for the nineteenth century and a row possibly designated ‘ Trade and Industry ‘ .
30 Davide was walking now down the street which intersected with the woman 's shop ; she still gave sheets of pink blotting paper for change , and a photograph of her son was pinned up on the shelf behind her till ; the news was that he was in the army , but Davide was ashamed to inquire what that report concealed .
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