Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [noun] [prep] [noun sg] with " in BNC.

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1 However , the bishop of Worcester normally paid £10 , while at Feckenham the fee was given as no less than £14. 16s. 10½d. , but this perhaps included services in connexion with the forest administration .
2 It is reported that , while out riding in Wychwood Forest , he suddenly came face to face with the shade of Amy Robsart .
3 At seven a.m. the following morning , contemplating newspaper headlines which screamed ‘ The Filth and the Fury ’ , and with the clamour of shareholders ringing in his ears , Leslie Hill personally telephoned Branson at home with a simple request , ‘ Can we talk ? ’
4 We may enlarge our conceptions beyond all imaginable space ; we only produce atoms in comparison with the reality of things .
5 Instead , Levy had simply assured Baker that Israel would not use the US funding in the occupied territories , and would henceforth share information regarding settlement with US officials .
6 By May the play was almost complete — all that was necessary was the process of readjustment which would necessarily take place in consultation with director and actors .
7 With the company having invested heavily in plant-specific training for a particular worker , and output from the plant not being directly related to the number of workers in the plant , firms operating these technologies will be reluctant to hire and fire such highly trained workers in line with fluctuations in product demand .
8 The Committee of London & Scottish Bankers ( CLSB ) has been merged with with the British Banker 's Association ( BBA ) ( which has hitherto existed side by side with the CLSB ) .
9 Numbers only have meaning in comparison with other numbers .
10 This will only cause problems with consultation with the members and they 're the most important , the bloody members , but it could lead to and a scramble for jobs .
11 After a second operation in January 1945 he nevertheless visited Washington in connection with the Far Eastern war and , although dying , he wrote a scientific paper for the sixtieth-birthday tribute to Niels Bohr .
12 Promotion of the state-owned sector has generally gone hand in hand with promotion of the indigenous , i.e. African , private sector , although in ‘ socialist ’ countries the scope of the latter has sometimes been consciously restricted .
13 If he does , he may just come face to face with himself .
14 This is a project which is to help children at school understand something of industry and of the industrial world in which they 're going to work , and also conversely to bring industrialists into involvement with schools themselves and with developing the curriculum .
15 There seems to be a tendency towards centralisation , paradoxically going hand in hand with devolution .
16 Only in Orkney did this response receive a low rating which could be attributed to most of the people interviewed having been brought up on a farm and having the confidence that usually goes hand in hand with experience .
17 Around the harbour , fishermen 's tavernas still jostle side by side with the newer cafés and bars which have sprung up to cater for the younger market , and the main daytime activity seems to be relaxing over a quiet glass of something while watching the boats chug in and out .
18 It always goes hand in hand with any great artist .
19 We should , of course , widen the context even further for , if in the movies preaching usually came hand in hand with melodrama , this should remind us that films were still firmly in the hands of showmen and they were free to use social comment and social settings as they thought best .
20 Like other frontier peoples , the French Basques have not always seen eye to eye with Paris .
21 " I do n't always see eye to eye with my father for instance about the way things are done here . "
22 Fernand was employed by the previous owner and does not always see eye to eye with Alain on the way the estate should be managed , but no … ’
23 In trade and agriculture , thirdly , Britain is committed always to pursue policies in concert with other EC members , and has pooled sovereignty in these areas completely .
24 Contemplating ‘ the displaced fragments of inner city decline ’ — peripheral council estates — it suggested that wealth-creation ‘ must always go hand in hand with just distribution , — offering , thereby , an alternative interpretation of ‘ partnership ’ ( p. 53 ) .
25 Eugenics had always gone hand in hand with socialism for Haldane — he and his sister , Naomi ( later Mitchison ) , joined both the Oxford Eugenics Society and the Labour party — because , as he explained , biology compels us to recognise that the innate inequality of men requires scientific management by the state .
26 The differences are deep and go far back into history , but while I have been a Minister dealing with the economy and the environment I have always had the greatest possible collaboration from all the parties in Northern Ireland , which have always worked cheek by jowl with one another and with me for the benefit of all the people of Northern Ireland .
27 Union discontent was lead by a well-organised unified opposition front , and the Rasputin affair further lost legitimacy of Tsarism with an opposition stronger than in 1905 .
28 Many people had worked on the paper for twenty years , and never once come face to face with the Editor .
29 Two minutes later , I was sure nobody had ever mentioned Woolwich in connection with Jo .
30 We also incurred costs in connection with the re-positioning of our United Kingdom international brands which involved the rationalisation of a limited number of our facilities .
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