Example sentences of "[subord] it [vb -s] with the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 At the northern tip , where it merges with the Vale of Evesham , some grain was also grown , but the Vale of Berkeley , towards the south , was an area of small dairy holdings where arable farming was restricted in scale .
2 Hay is the most obvious taste association , striking you first on the bouquet , where it mingles with the scent of crumbled biscuits , and when it comes to flavour , it is met by a faint dusting of icing sugar .
3 It is often divided into two lobes by an inflexion of its wall where it articulates with the pleuron .
4 It is an angry , retrospective account of the trip to Aden which coincides more accurately with Nizan 's highly militant frame of mind in 1930 and 1931 , than it does with the Nizan of 1926 and 1927 groping his way slowly towards the solution of political action .
5 issue by a company of its own securities for cash provided it complies with the listing particulars provisions , or , as appropriate , the prospectus provisions .
6 For example , an advertisement relating to the issue by a company of its own securities for cash is excluded from the advertising restriction provided it complies with the listing particulars provisions , or , as appropriate , the prospectus provisions .
7 Take this surface up until it links with the flue back
8 Subs on the Guardian are relatively light-handed , but reporters on some tabloids often have difficulty recognising their own work — especially if it clashes with the view of the proprietor .
9 On the other hand , if it integrates with the airline part of the holiday and begins to develop its own hotels and resort complexes this is a case of backward vertical integration , since in this case the holiday firm is pushing its liaisons further back into the supply network of the holiday .
10 Another agency may therefore apply for an EPO if it disagrees with the recommendation of the case conference or that recommendation has not been acted upon by the local authority .
11 No , the reason why is cos it clashes with the coursework .
12 This hooking action is important because it interferes with the opponent 's attempts to free his arm and keeps him closed off for a longer period .
13 For example , a book about human rights in the context in which we live can be considered subversive because it disagrees with the vision of those in authority . ’
14 For example , a book about human rights in the context in which we live can be considered subversive because it disagrees with the vision of those in authority . ’
15 The directors must act in accordance with what they believe to be an appropriate balancing of the sometimes conflicting interests , but the court can not intervene merely because it disagrees with the way in which the directors have weighted those interests .
16 This serves as an introduction to Part II , and more particularly as a prelude to Chapter 6 , because it deals with the subject of fiction itself : something which is strictly not a matter of style , but which is presupposed by the study of style in fiction writing .
17 Starlings , which are active during the day , lock onto melatonin when it coincides with the end of their activity .
18 But this sound is not of this world for other sounds are heard distinctly and cause this sound to die , though it returns with the silence .
19 The therapist can not win out against death , but he or she can win out for life , for a sense of the real , for the kind of growth that truly matters ; dealing as it does with the evaluation of ways to love and hate , with the meanings of human conduct , an appreciation of human nature , and the succession of the generations .
20 ‘ For sociology too , dealing as it does with the behaviour of people in society , can not be anything but applied psychology .
21 One ambiguity which runs through most definitions , as it does with the word ‘ course ’ , is whether one is referring to the total package of studies or only one element in it ; thus one can speak of the undergraduate curriculum or the history curriculum .
22 Clause 4 is the heart of the agreement , dealing as it does with the mechanism for the forecasting of requirements and the placing of orders .
23 This was not adopted and is unlikely to be , as it conflicts with the court 's ability to take into account policy factors and whether the civil action furthers the aims of the legislation .
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