Example sentences of "[vb infin] [verb] [adv prt] with a [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Why should a female want to pair up with a male that already has several females when there are bachelors around ?
2 Ideally you might like to end up with a set which , even if only subconsciously , reminds you of the atmosphere and tension of those rallies . ’
3 Instead he or she must hope to get by with a combination of other measures — a clear and detailed policy statement , training , frequent discussions on practice and spot checks of work completed .
4 We put on a few and I knew I was finishing , so I thought I would try to go out with a bang by breaking the pavilion window in the Long Room .
5 Actually , the BMC does n't know all the details yet and it 's highly probable you 'll have to come up with a bit of cash yourself , but if you 're keen call Roger Payne on .
6 Dad do we have to we have to come up with a name .
7 ‘ Generally , if I 'm playing on a track , I 'll listen to the lyrics and then I 'll try to come up with a guitar part that suits the song in terms of imagery .
8 I 'll try to come up with a part that suits the imagery of the song , and then the tuning seems to suggest itself
9 ‘ She might have come in with a boyfriend .
10 There was nothing to worry about : if there had been , the fuzz would have come in with a warrant .
11 It is too late for British Telecom to return to its old ways if only because the public now knows that it does not have to put up with a telephone system built for the 1950s .
12 As well as the noise the couple would have to put up with a landfill site within a few yards of their garden .
13 ‘ I keep imagining this morning that I have — please believe me , Milena , because when we 're married you will have to put up with a lot of this , but I keep imagining that I have lots of little crisp sepia legs . ’
14 So now you do n't have to put up with a two-star performance from ordinary mercury-free batteries , when there is now a new four star alternative .
15 Immigrant doctors in Britain may silently have put up with a lot of it in the past , but those born and educated in Britain have every right to expect that they will be judged strictly on merit .
16 The universe would have started off with a period of exponential or " inflationary " expansion in which it would have increased its size by a very large factor .
17 Might have ended up with a house like this , ’ he added with a laugh .
18 The ankle muscles were holding the foot in an almost normal position — oblivious to the fact that the joints had nothing to rest on , that this was a classic case of a boy who would normally have ended up with a club foot .
19 It 's almost like the ceremony of ordaining a bishop in fact if I 'd turned the wrong page we could have ended up with a bishop rather than an abbot you know
20 It is an essential part of the composition and , as George put it : ‘ You do n't want to end up with a cushion that resembles a lump of putty . ’
21 One PC complained at length to a sergeant that the ‘ ground ’ where they both worked had become much quieter ; he looked back with nostalgia to the old days when the ground was much ‘ harder ’ and ‘ you could literally be strolling past a pub and a bloke would come staggering out with a knife in his back … ’
22 Erm which I saw again in Marks this year which you could wear tucked in with a belt .
23 Will home helps start turning up with a set of clubs ?
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