Example sentences of "[adv] with [pron] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | They found him under the yew tree and after a rather stormy scene , during which Bigwig grew rough and impatient , he was bullied rather than persuaded into going down with them into the great burrow . |
2 | A thousand windows , some reflecting the dying light of the day , stared down with him at the trampled earth , the lines of washing-poles , the puddles . |
3 | Francie grinned , and joined in with her after the first few phrases . |
4 | Undaunted , the young Scot chased after the opposition in one shoe and came in with them to the final take-over . |
5 | On Saturdays as a special treat Granpa would allow me to go along with him to the early morning market in Covent Garden , where he would select the fruit and vegetables that we would later sell from his pitch , just opposite Mr Salmon 's and Dunkley 's , the fish and chippy that stood next to the baker 's . |
6 | " … given to the Miller of Conistone for going along with me onto the fell 1s . " |
7 | A neighbour suggested I go along with her to the local WI and , despite my reservations , I had a wonderful time . |
8 | Jasper sensed some of this and vowed not to go along with it in the sheeplike fashion of the others . |
9 | I 've played along with you for the past hour . |
10 | As one would expect , this work , together with one by the Portuguese Moor Ibn Bassam , is virulently opposed to El Cid . |
11 | These are now part of planning history , but it is live history : the issues are still very much with us in the 1980s , and there is no guarantee that the current resolution of them will prove sufficiently resilient to withstand the unpredictable changes in the context within which they operate . |
12 | As sometimes happens with pianists of exceptional technical ability there can often be a sense in their playing that they are trying hard not to run away with themselves in the easy passages . |
13 | Erm I will take those notes away with me in the strictest confidence , go through them erm work out some recommendations , how you could hit the goals that you will go for at the end of the day . |
14 | ‘ If I can get drunk enough on this stuff I might be able to get away with it at the next repatriation board . ’ |
15 | But then there were the terns getting away with it on the other side of the window . ’ |
16 | He stood his own ground , deciding it would be better to let those at the rear who were awaiting their turn to descend , see his reassuring presence still with them on the upper floor . |
17 | Within minutes they had roused sleeping children from four of those homes and driven off with them into the murky winter dawn . |
18 | I hope to be able to discuss it further with him in the not-too-distant future . |
19 | WYCOMBE went home with everything but the one prize they wanted last night — a place in the third round of the FA Cup . |
20 | A team of linguists and experts in primate communication have been working intensively with her during the past year to teach her English . |
21 | Dolly let him get on with it in the usual way . |
22 | He caught up with her on the far side of the teahouse , in an area that was roped off for the staff 's use only . |
23 | But the writer in the Morning Chronicle , although a punctilious recorder , only alludes in his final sentence to the worst feature of such dwellings : ‘ And yet you fancy you could put up with everything but the close earthy smell , which you endeavour in vain to escape by breathing short and quickly . ’ |
24 | Can you give me some idea of erm h how you started up with him in the first place ? |
25 | Charles caught up with him in the Green Room . |
26 | You 've put up with me for the last ten days . ’ |
27 | When you decide to get married , fix yourself up with someone of the old school , not one of those feminist flibbertigibbets of the kind Jim and I have landed ourselves with — undomesticated , never there , eyes set on further career mountains to be climbed . |
28 | He 'd run to follow it , missed it at the traffic lights , almost caught up with it at the next . |
29 | She 's got to put up with you for the next six months or more ! ’ |
30 | Eternal damnation for ever getting tied up with you in the first place ? ’ |