Example sentences of "[to-vb] [adv] [prep] a [noun] with " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ I am not about to sit down to a meal with you , ’ she said bitingly , ‘ Nor am I — ’ |
2 | SCIENTISTS are beginning to catch on to a technique with the space-age name of FAB-MS ( fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry ) . |
3 | The President-elect got straight down to work yesterday with a meeting with the team responsible for easing his passage into power on January 20 . |
4 | ’ I 'm a loner who likes to curl up on a sofa with a good book , ’ she says . |
5 | THE Ulster Unionists were having urgent talks with the US Consulate in Belfast today before deciding whether to pull out of a meeting with prominent Irish-Americans . |
6 | Nor can democracy be expected to work smoothly in a society with rigid divisions , producing a permanent majority and a permanent minority . |
7 | It is hard for us to communicate back to a horse with body language , but we can simulate some of the horse 's actions . |
8 | ‘ I used to come here as a kid with my parents . ’ |
9 | Following the thought of my hon. Friend the Member for Dartford ( Mr. Dunn ) , may I invite the Minister to come there for a walk with his dog on Christmas day to envisage the damage that the new road will cause ? |
10 | The likelihood is that St Helens will have had their minds wonderfully concentrated by the experience and should win the replay at Wakefield Trinity tonight to go through to a meeting with Oldham in the quarter-finals on Sunday . |
11 | Set three days aside in your diary ( within the next three months ) to go away to a hotel with your team and tackle the issue . |
12 | Those below about 14 will love bombing around on our Toppers , but will sometimes get bored on longer day cruises , so we ask you to sail together as a family with under 14 's aboard . |
13 | In later years a boy may continue to look unconsciously for a mother with whom to relate , or a girl for a father to take the place of a loved parent or compensate for a lack of satisfaction in that direction . |
14 | It was the practice to walk out of a Sunday with the braided leather belt showing just below your waistcoat . |
15 | To clear this last hurdle I was forced to queue up outside a shed with a number of soldiers . |
16 | This Thursday evening at Exeter Hall in Kidlington , visitors will be able to go out on a demonstration with top traffic patrol drivers , and have their driving skills assessed by an advanced instructor . |
17 | just to go out on a Monday with her , cos she does n't have nursery on a Monday , Tiffany . |
18 | Unless — do you have to go back to a hospital with it , or anything ? ’ |
19 | If we are dealing with a regression to what may be a former lifetime , then , having asked the patient to go back to a period with which his subconscious mind feels comfortable , I like to help him to create the picture of his former personality little by little . |
20 | I said if you had n't I 'd get you to go back for a chat with him . ’ |
21 | I was anticipating severe disapproval from that quarter , because my father was bemused , to say the least , by my refusal to settle down into a job with a future , as he put it . |
22 | The alarm was raised when she failed to turn up for a meeting with students . |
23 | Groups of people who feel under threat are unlikely to respond enthusiastically to a researcher with a questionnaire . |
24 | Her mum said Sergeant Joe would take care of that Flash Harry , but if he did n't she 'd have a go herself , she 'd bash Archie 's bowler so hard over his head he 'd never get it off again , he 'd have to go about like a man with no eyeballs . |
25 | It was Terry Rickards saying that he would like to drop in for a chat with Mr Dalgliesh if it would n't be too much bother and would nine be convenient ? |
26 | DAVID Rocastle aims to get off to a flier with Leeds today by chalking up a hat-trick in the Makita Tournament . |
27 | And if I had to play them today , I 'd have to get off in a room with a record player , probably for a couple of hours and learn them . ’ |
28 | The first team to link up in a line with their arms crossed . |