Example sentences of "[vb base] [adv] [vb pp] to [noun] with " in BNC.
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1 | Anselm then returned to Rome with the pope and stayed with him until Easter 1099 , when he took part in another Council . |
2 | They 've really got to grips with their environmental problems , facing them squarely , with common purpose . |
3 | The difficulty I think that we 're facing , is that it 's happening in year two of a four year transition period , before we 've really got to grips with what the long-term position is , what the overall demands are , and to what degree we are going to be able to model , change , control and , and influence those demands . |
4 | Law firms have not come to grips with the issues , ’ says Geraldine Cotton , chair of the 5,500-strong English Association of Women Solicitors . |
5 | We in the law , like other denizens of these blessed isles , have perforce come to terms with the disagreeable factor of inflation . |
6 | Although some students have a good grasp of colloquial language , few have ever got to grips with the concept of register . |
7 | If they have both come to terms with their differences and can now work together successfully , then they are to be congratulated . |
8 | and we have n't got to grips with the corporate market yet fully |
9 | After all , how can anyone sort out their problems if they have n't come to grips with themselves ? ’ |
10 | And yet we have n't come to terms with that . |
11 | I have n't come to terms with the bloke I killed yet , but when I do , it will be frightening . |
12 | IF the more positive tone yesterday was any indication , investors have either come to grips with their fears of a hung parliament-Labour victory or are ignoring the polls altogether . |
13 | Given the economic significance of such groups , it may be surprising that neither Parliament nor the courts have yet got to grips with the problems they present . |