Example sentences of "[adv prt] with [art] [adj] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 To be in with a chance , all you have to do is settle down with a great big book of pop facts and figures and fill in the empty squares .
2 To be in with a chance , all you have to do is settle down with a great big book of pop facts and figures and fill in the empty squares .
3 There was a straw gypsy hat , tied down with a rich half-lace handkerchief .
4 In the mornings Kalchu beat the mud down with a flat wooden spade to compress and seal it .
5 Returning to the conversation , over the delicious Peking duck , and fresh cabbage washed down with a splendid Chinese wine , our host argued fervently : ‘ Tractors : do not be silly : what would you expect us to do with all the donkey minders ? ’
6 And Doherty , the best Irish player at present on the professional circuit , did n't let his fans down with a comfortable 5–2 win over an out of touch Neal Foulds of England .
7 The Ronseal varnishes used here can also be applied to a painted or previously varnished surface that has been rubbed down with a fine abrasive paper .
8 Battling Nottingham turned the table upside down with a priceless 18–9 win against Northampton that could keep them in division one and deny their visitors the championship .
9 Here you 'll find Frankfurt specialties such as Schäufelchen ( shoulder of pork ) , Kraut und Rippchen ( sauerkraut with spare ribs ) and Handkäs mit Musik ( cheese and onion ) , all washed down with the lethal local cider , Ebbelwei .
10 He stares out at us with steely blue eyes , his hair neatly twisted into one dark curl on his forehead ; he 's sporting a smart black frock-coat with a neatly-buttoned waistcoat and a full cravat anchored down with an ornate jewelled pin and chain .
11 In the hall of the castle Sir John was reasoning with a group of servants while Lady Charlotte had hysterics under the portrait of a clan chief of the sixteenth century — an armoured and bearded warrior who looked down with an imperious black stare .
12 Even Ivan Illich , though their opening sentence contains an echo of his ‘ the medical establishment has become a major threat to health ’ , is ignored in the text : he scrapes in with a mere single source reference .
13 By October most of the crew of Valiant had seen enough of the west coast and the weather was closing in with a distinct wintry look .
14 The only exception to this is that the test machine arrived without one of its little rubber feet , something that I feel might happen quite regularly , given that they just screw in with a small self-tapping screw , and have no supporting adhesive to really make things permanent .
15 The captain joined in with a long raucous song , beating time on the tea tray .
16 ‘ My goodness ! ’ exclaimed the doctor as a patient walked in with a huge swollen nose .
17 Lillywhite , from Walton-on-Thames , started the day with just 20 seconds to spare over Norway 's Ole Simensen , who jumped from ninth to second place when he came in with a four-strong leading group in Liverpool City Centre .
18 A Shetland crofting family , for instance , had moved in with a childless older woman , who became ‘ one of the family …
19 Arguments of this sort which confused the " lower sorts of men " with the " higher sorts of ape " were not simply exercises in increasingly refined scientific discrimination ; they were closely meshed in with an ongoing dialectical debate , the original purpose of which had been to establish a synthesis between the theological doctrine of the Fall and the newly discovered facts of human geography .
20 Meanwhile Jackson himself , a gangly six foot four , with a hairline not so much receding as speeding flat out towards his neck , was easily slotted in with the other unlikely pop stars , taking their surly revenge on the conventional way of doing things .
21 In the eyes of such politicians , industrial managers were not seen as the creators of the nation 's wealth , and the providers of job opportunities for the people , but as despoilers of the environment ; obsolete men , peddling obsolete views , who did n't really fit in with the new social scheme of things .
22 These differences led to differing perceptions of their role by the two development officers — in Ipswich the development officer was a little unsure of how she was going to ‘ work in with the existing multi-disciplinary team ’ , whereas in Newham the development officer said she felt she was probably going to spend a good deal of her time negotiating between the different services and ‘ getting them to talk to each other ’ .
23 But just in case Vecchi tied in with the five thousand reward Mr. Bonanza was posting , I did n't see why I should settle for the usual sawbuck . ’
24 250 They 've become accustomed What they 're forgetting is that this fits in with the stated local plan and with original proposals set out in 1989 which is n't so long ago but people tend to forget that sort of thing 328
25 One of the one of the difficulties is that that that theatres up and down the country have faced over the last two years of the new target that were brought in with the eighty eight education act where schools were not allowed to make a charge it could only be a voluntary contribution now the council of Great Britain have looked at this it 's a problem cos of this decimated schools audiences .
26 It had been Dr Rolleston 's great sorrow that he had not been able to help children who had come in with the dreaded Infantile Paralysis , not that any other professor in Europe had been able to do better than by careful nursing stop the paralysis spreading .
27 The large room , a deluxe double , was decorated in pale-pink fabrics that blended in with the white rattan furniture .
28 It is argued that the ‘ German model ’ is suited to all other economies ; that its undemocratic features ( the prime place given to an unelected Central Bank ) are either immaterial or ‘ a price worth paying ’ ; that it provides the ideal model for a European federal monetary authority ; that all the economies of Europe are capable of being synchronised to fit in with the German economic cycle .
29 Firstly whether these subscriptions should be for one year only or whether it should be fixed for three years to tie in with the tri-annual general meeting .
30 Work your way to the other end — the last trench is simply filled in with the barrowed top spit from the first row .
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