Example sentences of "[adv] associated with [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It appears that rather than allowing us to enter a realm of meditation and escapism so associated with abstraction these paintings are determined to make us face up to the ambiguities in our readings of the visual world .
2 Thus , if maleness is especially associated with individualism , feminists may need to point to connectedness , but if connectedness is part of the male view , emphasising it wo n't be feminist .
3 ( d. 1245 ) , confidential clerk and estate steward especially associated with building projects , was a native of West Dereham , Norfolk .
4 It may be that a trait of general carelessness ( apparently associated with anxiety ) manifests as poor quality diary entry , as well as erratic usage of medication resulting in greater maximal variation of peak expiratory flow .
5 The extent of nectar production is apparently associated with pollinator size and there is variation in its sugar content and dilution .
6 A comprehensive galley , which includes a microwave oven , gives the operators standards of comfort not hitherto associated with lifeboats , and offers the prospect of ( Continued on page 92 ) survivors being given more than the traditional hot cup of tea !
7 He emphasizes that this was a time when the significance of the ‘ economic security and social esteem hitherto associated with membership ’ was declining .
8 Pope has commented that it is hard not to detect in Ælfric 's statement in Wyrdwriteras that we sceolon secan æt Gode sylfum urne ræd mid anrædum mode ( we should seek our counsel from God himself with unanimous spirit ) " an allusion to the unræd so unhappily associated with Ethelred " .
9 We have found , however , that when more samples were investigated with the same methods , the abnormal AChE is not only associated with AD but also related to other neurological diseases that may cause dementia , although these patients are currently non-demented ( Mini-Mental State examination ) :
10 In this case , nonsense is not only associated with grammar but learning as well .
11 In fact , social and economic circumstances such as poverty , poor housing or unemployment are highly associated with onset of some forms of mental illness , and serve to act as triggers precipitating episodes of depression , anxiety and , in some cases psychotic illnesses .
12 Some verbs , like ‘ meet ’ , are likely to be highly associated with events where people play a common role in some developing story .
13 ‘ It is particularly pleasing that Councillor Thorne will be able to carry out this duty ’ said Jackie Cope , the Museum 's Curator , ‘ he is very much associated with tourism issues and the regeneration of Keighley as a whole . ’
14 There was astonishment also at what Sylvie Guillem could do with her legs , and excited suspense was also manifested over the question of whether Inès de la Fressange was coming or whether she had been deemed to be too much associated with Chanel and had therefore , in spite of being a close personal friend of Christian 's , been unceremoniously dumped .
15 In those times people worshipped according to the cycles of nature ; they held rituals at key points of the year , and in the minds of the Charismatics they are very much associated with things like standing stones .
16 Hitched no more to the hay-bale and wagon-wheel trappings long associated with country , and without so much as a yee-ha , these performers are selling albums by the million and crooning all the way to the bank .
17 The move to Apollo Place brought Minton to an area long associated with artists ; through a circular window half-way up the stairs he looked down on to the next door studio which had once belonged to Turner .
18 The Royal Society of Musicians , The Royal Academy and the Zoological Society of London ( London Zoo ) are among many major societies long associated with Drummonds .
19 Political upheaval and war are not necessarily associated with curriculum change ; and even when they are , change seems habitually to be followed by a reversion to the status quo ante , a tendency to equate change with relabelling , a reassertion of institutional inertia .
20 Although this phenomenon has an immunological mechanism it is not necessarily associated with protection against reinfection since the larval challenge often develops to maturity .
21 Given that the recognition of the significance of portal hypertension in portopulmonary hypertension is recent , it is possible that other cases of PBC associated primary PHT have been dismissed as merely associated with liver disease .
22 The underlying epidemiology is unknown , but is perhaps associated with pasture contamination by that proportion of ingested larvae which did not undergo hypobiosis in early summer .
23 He allowed her to walk across to the counter for a cup of tea because he felt she was flustered , not an emotion one easily associated with Sergeant Henley , and it might settle her down .
24 perhaps the loss of social interaction that is normally associated with mealtimes contributes to this .
25 It is fair to say that this race lacked the energetic input normally associated with Mansell , banned from yesterday 's Grand Prix after breaking the regulations at Estoril last Sunday .
26 To you , the user , it means that a series of less powerful programs can be used to produce results normally associated with top of the range software .
27 Extreme behaviourism is normally associated with B. F. Skinner .
28 During cholestasis , periportal hepatocytes have been shown to express integrins normally associated with bile duct epithelium .
29 Altogether , she had the kind of gloss normally associated with models and film stars , and it seemed oddly out of place here in her aunt 's elegant sitting-room .
30 to provide ( a ) an attraction for new residents to the area to provide a basic pool of manpower for the new industries , ( b ) a new and attractive environment in which to work and play , ( c ) an alternative quality of life to that normally associated with Tyneside and the declining industrial areas in South East Northumberland , and ( d ) a strong reservoir to meet the recurring economic crises which have been suffered by the North East since the last war .
  Next page