Example sentences of "[vb pp] [adv prt] with the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | The people who are seizing and occupying the present time can not belong in my colour , they 're like the bits that leap out of a spinning bowl , too heavy , too separate and distinct to be blended in with the other substances ; red-hot stones , flung out and setting on fire the place where they land . |
2 | Andre had fallen in with the legendary Lafons of Meursault — Dominique Lafon was at college at the same time , and Lafon pere had become something of a mentor . |
3 | Turkey is flown in with the weekly food supplies , while in Tripoli some enterprising expats even breed turkeys specifically for the festive table . |
4 | We 've plunged in with the practical details rather than training itself . |
5 | The dots are filled in with the appropriate names like this : |
6 | Abercrombie 's broad-brush strategy was now filled in with the complementary prescriptions for design at the local scale , both central areas and residential districts . |
7 | The dancing was to good old rock and roll music , and even those who were just a twinkle in their father 's eye in the 6Os joined in with the jiving fun . |
8 | All this conversation was carried on with the greatest difficulty . |
9 | They may only be carried on with the local authority 's consent , and |
10 | In particular the whole idea of a Prime Minister was looked on with the gravest suspicion . |
11 | Only a party bigot would claim that they had somehow come in with the Conservative Government three years earlier . |
12 | There is a problem here in that much of the certainty and confidence with which the term has been used have collapsed along with the secure life-time employment which characterized industrial capitalism . |
13 | What was different was that there had been something else mixed in with the raw hunger blazing in his eyes . |
14 | With each successive moult the current crop of fungal parasites is shed along with the old exoskeleton . |
15 | Second , the Old English , descendants of settlers who had come over with the first wave of English conquest during the Middle Ages . |
16 | An attack is warded off with the rear hand guard : the defender then drops onto one knee and strikes with a crippling tiger claw to the groin . |
17 | Another way of seeing Cutler 's position , especially his historical schema , is as a conflation of Marx and Marshall McLuhan ; ‘ mode of production ’ as organizing concept gets mixed up with the Canadian communication theorist 's ‘ medium is the message ’ philosophy , in which consciousness , cultural forms and social organization all derive primarily from the effects of the various media . |
18 | He was ‘ more largely mixed up with the principal people and events of his time than any other man ’ ( Charles Greville , Greville Memoirs , 1874–8 ) . |
19 | I got mixed up with the wrong crowd for a while … |
20 | We called it that so if it leaked out it would get mixed up with the old Winter Garden names . ’ |
21 | They 've also come up with the quaint idea of having a T-shirt recycling stall in the club where you can take your old T-shirts and get a new Dodgy one in exchange . |
22 | This hits application performance , but the company has come up with the innovative idea of letting users run NLMs in protected mode until they are proved stable , after which they can be invited into the same memory segment as the core operating system to boost performance . |
23 | The Social Democrat Edith Niehuis has come up with the dubious argument that , because of the Catholic approach to female priests ( who have practised in the Protestant Church here for two decades ) , the tax is an ‘ unconstitutional discrimination against women ’ . |
24 | Now , last weekend 's cycle ride down the new section of the M forty once looked threatened by being blown away as the Met Office warned of impending storms , but in fact the sun shone down on the riders and today , less than a week the counting is done and Mike Biddolph from Oxfordshire County Council , who also took part in the event , has come up with the grand total of — how much have you raised Mike ? |
25 | It 's very new to me ; it 's just too bad that they still have n't come up with the perfect guitar synth . |
26 | I think the Court of Bank of Ireland has come up with the greatest riddle since 1782 , when an Act of Parliament established the Bank . |
27 | Investment analysts have come up with the following forecasts for earnings growth : |
28 | Even then , major subscribers like the US and the USSR had not come up with the necessary money . |
29 | East Grinstead , West Sussex-based company Shakespeare Speechwriter UK Ltd , formerly EMG Software , has come up with the ultimate system for keyboard-phobes — a voice activated personal computer . |
30 | JOHN KASMIN , or ‘ Kasmin ’ , as everyone calls him , has come up with the ultimate solution to the art slump . |