Example sentences of "[pron] be [verb] with [art] [det] " in BNC.
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1 | You 've made it very clear that you think I 'm tarred with the same brush as William and that 's fine by me ! |
2 | Now this — Ruth Cohen and her stolen file , and I was filled with the same strange , tingling excitement . |
3 | I was tarred with the same brush , to a certain extent . |
4 | Soviet writers raised the idea that the guarantor countries , which should include the USSR , the United States , and other states acceptable to both Afghanistan and its neighbours which were negotiating with the former , could adopt an obligation to observe the sovereignty , independence , territorial integrity and non-aligned status of Afghanistan . |
5 | The situations envisaged by that subsection seem to me well illustrated by Bank of England v. Riley [ 1992 ] 2 W.L.R. 840 , which was dealing with the same words in another section of the same Act . |
6 | I wanted to work with people who are running a small firm , people who are dealing with the same problems as me because they 're running a small business . ’ |
7 | This is obviously easier if you are fishing with a few friends who are prepared to let you move in if they locate the fish first . |
8 | You 're tarred with the same brush . |
9 | ‘ You do n't think you 're tarred with the same brush , do you ? ’ |
10 | In Cornwall in 1796 , 1801 and 1812 a noose and contract was taken around to farmers , who were threatened with the former if they did not agree to sign the latter . |
11 | The scientist who proposes new interpretations or principles is rather like the fictional detective ( they may exist in reality too ) who is faced with the same evidence as the reader and the police , but sees that it forms a different pattern when seen from the right angle . |
12 | Anyone who is acquainted with the many beautiful station gardens at home must be impressed painfully by the apparent absolute lack of interest shown in the appearance of railway stations , particularly in connection with gardens , in India . |
13 | Liz was asked to imagine how she would respond if she was faced with the same problems again . |
14 | And now she was saying with the same delight , about someone else , ‘ Absolutely . ’ |
15 | The doctrine is that whenever you are faced with a decision , you always follow what the last person who was faced with the same decision did . |
16 | She cast an impatient look at Mitch , who was standing with the same stunned attitude he had adopted when he had seen that the girl was blind . |
17 | So , with the exception of the boy Matthew , who was marked with the same ruthless stamp as himself , he grudgingly tolerated the ‘ intruders ’ brought under his roof , and whom he had come to resent beyond reason ; perhaps because he saw in them his own failure as a family man . |
18 | Once again , it would seem clear that we are dealing with the same individual , whose militant nationalism it was deemed expedient to conceal . |
19 | Even where the name is recorded early on , however , we can not be sure that we are dealing with the same site , bearing in mind the movement implied above . |
20 | The opening of the Pyramid redirected the circulation of visitors , but once one had left the escalators in the Hall Napoleon behind , one was confronted with the same layout of rooms as ten years ago . |
21 | given the circumstances and difficulties outlined above , it must be certain that the refusals will include perfectly good payers , simply because they are stamped with the same circumstantial warning signs as the bad payers . |
22 | All these guitars have slim necks , which helps to make the beginner 's life easier , and providing they are treated with the same care and respect as more expensive instruments , they should give good service for many years . |
23 | While the maximum that can be saved by an individual aged over 16 is £20 a month , more than one SAYE account can be held by the saver — provided they are held with the same institution and are opened at least one month apart . |
24 | The guests must be persuaded to return to the restaurant , where it is imperative they be served with a more than satisfactory meal and be completely pacified . |
25 | Within a month he knew almost as much about oven temperatures , controls , rising yeast and the correct mixture of flour to water as either of the two assistants , and as they were dealing with the same customers as Charlie was on his barrow , sales on both dropped only slightly during the first quarter . |
26 | Until recently , however , only the Archaeological Survey of India and the Konserwacji Zabytkow of Poland were permitted to work at Angkor Wat and Bayon , respectively because , like the Cambodians , they were aligned with the former Soviet bloc . |
27 | The development of 19C painting in Czechoslovakia follows that elsewhere in Europe , but here it is imbued with the same emergence of a national consciousness which can also be seen in literature and architecture . |
28 | But the pathway to discovery was established and the scale on which resources were expended to make these discoveries represents a fantastic extravagance when it is compared with the few thousands of pounds available to Florey and his colleagues , and even with the subsequent development of the original penicillins in the United States . |
29 | It was happening with a few students because I was still teaching for two or three months after ‘ Surfing ’ was released . |
30 | Walsh was assured that the people concerned were not French — though they were as bad — and he quickly concluded that he was dealing with no more than ‘ a mischiefuous gang of disaffected Englishmen ’ . |