Example sentences of "[vb infin] [adv] with the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Comment : Indirect questions are used all the time by people who need their status boosting through being given buckets of approval , or who are looking for a reason for punishing other people should they not fall in with the anticipated scenario .
2 Well obviously that factor er was considered carefully by the Ministry of Defence before our Secretary of State agreed that we could safely defer the in service date for Eurofighter two thousand and adjust the the er replacement plan er back in December ninety two , so we have looked at what is the current rate of consumption of airframe life on the jaguar er what can be done economically and sensibly to keep it flying safely and effectively into the next century and er we have come to the conclusion that we have a viable plan here which can tie up with the planned rate of delivery to service of Eurofighter two thousand .
3 She would never catch up with the enormous range of reading which seemed to be taken for granted by Bob and his friends , never .
4 It still exists and it will undoubtedly catch up with the retail price index shortly and go ahead of it from 1994 onwards , as the direct tax burden which is included in the TPI rises faster than the indirect taxes which go into the RPI .
5 And in this case we had to align the timber so that a sheet of plasterboard would line up with the projecting wall
6 David does n't know where with the right sex you know !
7 He said then he , we could carry on with the serious stuff !
8 Senior officials could carry on with the day-to-day business of the state without concerning themselves with any kind of specialist ministerial control .
9 Britain was indeed committed to entering a free and open European market in 1992 , but it could well do so with the highest inflation rate in western Europe , the worst balance of payments , and the sharpest contraction in the manufacturing base .
10 If parents choose to proceed on this basis , they should do so with the full understanding that they may be aborting a child capable of experiencing as full and satisfying a life as anyone else .
11 Such men depended upon success for support : for while du Guesclin might play upon his Breton origin to gather a force ( or route ) around him , the English could not do so with the same ease , and therefore came to rely upon their reputations to draw men to their service .
12 What I hear , which was straight off the phone last night , is that the Dutch fans will team up with the English fans , and back the English fans on to the beach and they will try and drown a few of the English people and they will throw bombs at them .
13 There we are we all have different ones but we should all finish up with the same answer .
14 Undemanding as to growing medium , it will do well with the usual mixtures provided for other hardy Cryptocoryne species .
15 If banks are short of liquidity they will lend less to both markets and rates will rise ; if the Bank of England readily provides funds to the discount market , houses will offer less attractive terms to other banks who will deposit instead with the parallel markets causing rates there to fall .
16 I 'd have thought any normal thief would make off with the whole bag .
17 For a statute or a past decision poses problems of consistency in strategy only when it has assigned people legal rights that a judge forming a new rule is for some reason powerless to change , rights that would work badly with the new rights he wants to create .
18 After attempting last month 's first 8-bars of the 16-bar solo from Linda Ronstadt 's That 'll Be The Day , we 'll crack on with the second half this month .
19 But paradoxically the public right-to-know argument , which may be a pure power argument for involvement in decision making or an argument just to know what has been decided ( and why ) , may conflict fundamentally with the individual right to know argument which may say , ‘ I have a right to know information and decisions about me and to prevent anyone else from knowing ’ — the confidentiality argument ( or one of them ) .
20 ‘ Do you still keep in with the great man Dander ? ’
21 A specific objective is that this new body will work directly with the local enterprise companies .
22 The next series will run concurrently with the first set , and will be held in Tees-side .
23 Uniforum Asia ‘ 92 conference will run concurrently with the first Asia Pacific Networking , Open Systems & Workstations ( NOW ) exhibit August 25–27 at the Marina Mandarin Hotel in Singapore .
24 In Committee I promised the Hon. Member for Dundee East ( Mr. McAllion ) that I would follow up with the Scottish Development Agency the need for management-employee buy-out teams to receive the same treatment as any other applicant for assistance from the SDA .
25 The old argument that software ca n't keep up with the rapid advances in hardware performance simply is n't true , he says .
26 You must keep up with the full range of your subjects — but where do you begin ?
27 ‘ I ca n't always keep up with the old bugger , but I 'm never far behind . ’
28 But I can keep up with the intermediate class and I said to Maxine , Does this get any harder ?
29 I do n't think yo I think you may be right but I do n't think I could keep up with the different kind of hairstyles !
30 I was just beginning to get to grips with the Campaign for Ink Print Information , but Women 's Tapeover could not keep up with the steady stream of new feminist writing that was emerging week by week .
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