Example sentences of "[modal v] [verb] [to-vb] [adv prt] with the " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ I want to know what is behind this first , ’ he snapped , ‘ because for the life of me I can not understand why a man in his position should want to take up with the likes of you . |
2 | We should prefer to go along with the European Communitywide scheme so that British industry is not put at a disadvantage . |
3 | We 'll have to carry on with the Week of the Lion tour if only to give there good people something to do . |
4 | ‘ You 'll have to check in with the policeman , ’ the Staff Nurse yelled after us . |
5 | Older women may hesitate to join in with the young , feeling that they may have to ape their manners to be accepted by them . |
6 | So we will er if we may er not ask you to introduce your document we we 'd like to get on with the questioning . |
7 | But I 'm thinking , I 'm think I 've got this terrible feeling I 'd have to come on with the princess , if we 've just got married |
8 | I now felt far more confident and comfortable knowing that I could refuse to go along with the guards ' antics if they really upset me . |
9 | Although , if it was a French war , might it also be assumed that the Vietnamese , whose tendency to sit on the fence was the subject of American as well as French complaint , would want to join in with the same enthusiasm that they would give to a national cause ? |
10 | Lucy had no intention of reverting to the former subject , so she said in a determined voice , ‘ I would like to get on with the job . |
11 | Therefore they would have to carry on with the remaining group . |
12 | He knew he would have to go through with the nightly ritual . |
13 | Countries opting for soft membership would have to put up with the first , and find substitutes for the second — for instance , by setting ( and hitting ) targets for money-GDP , using both fiscal and monetary policies . |
14 | Accordingly we would have to play along with the British for the time being , and take the beating which inevitably results through our association with an ally whom the Egyptians and other Arab states hated as imperialists . |
15 | I can imagine him being one of these , these , these er husbands who just want , who want , who will want to go out with the lads on his night out and will get , you know , he 's a , he 's ste I can imagine him being one of these stereotypical husbands who goes out , gets pissed , comes back , who wants the dinner on the table and |
16 | ‘ Josh will have to put up with the life that his mother can afford to lead . ’ |
17 | The Government are hoping to carry on and according to the Secretary of State for the Environment the people will have to put up with the tax until 1993 . |
18 | If a barchan formed by the prevailing wind ( Fig. 11.7A ) is subject to a strong wind from another direction ( Y on Fig. 11.7B ) , it will tend to swing round with the development of an incipient new wing at C and the overdevelopment of wing A. If the prevailing wind , X , again dominates , there will be a tendency for the dune to revert to its original form ( Fig. 11.7C ) . |
19 | One way or another they can expect to meet up with the majority of the players who will represent Canada at the ‘ 95 World Cup . |