Example sentences of "to go with [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The CBF says that it wants ‘ a new look , and perhaps a new name , to go with a new approach ’ .
2 One day Victoria made herself a pair of earrings out of porcelain to go with a particular dress , and they turned out to be the start of a new part-time career .
3 She gestured for him to go with an indifferent wave of her hand .
4 Colin Stephens added the conversion to go with an earlier penalty for a 10-0 lead .
5 It 's best to go with an organised group if you want to cycle or paddle your way through the area .
6 Gate , now the game 's official historian , has written a typically well researched text to go with an excellent collection of illustrations and cartoons .
7 I just want to go with the least amount of gear I can get away with , be able to troubleshoot it myself and keep it simple .
8 The Vancouver based Rob Boyd duly added to his record here — a second to go with the two wins and a third .
9 In the nineteenth century the chateau was altered further , with some ham fisted restoration and the addition by King Louis-Philippe and the Emperor Napoleon — the Third , not the First — of a sixth tower to go with the five earlier ones .
10 Key Publishing , who produce FlyPast , added a sum of £500 to go with the prestigious trophy and the associated publicity .
11 Yes , so I thought , I might erm , cos I bought a jumper , I bought a pale blue jumper to go with the flowery leggings , but , I 've decided I 'll take blue jumper back , cos , although it would be alright with plain white trousers I thought that 's all I would wear it with , I would n't wear it with anything else , so , I think I 'll change that , if I get the dark blue leggings like Jamie , then I 'll get the striped jumper the same .
12 Sometimes the lintel has a brief homily , to go with the ancestral names , on the lines maybe of ‘ Biciac , orhoit hilciaz ’ , or ‘ You who are alive , remember death ’ .
13 White-jacketed waiters tiptoed reverently around them , pouring hock with the frozen scampi , a claret with a fruity , full-bodied label to go with the reheated roast lamb .
14 To go with the new Class 90s an order was placed for twenty-nine Driving Van Trailers ( DVTs ) to replace the old Mk 1 guards ' van .
15 He also liked Rufus 's occasional sensitivity , which did n't seem to go with the other aspects of his personality .
16 And they would like to buy a name to go with the millions .
17 Life is full of ups and downs and I know that there are going to be bad times to go with the good ones .
18 She decided to make a herb sauce to go with the cold poached mackerel , rather than the mayonnaise Madeleine had planned .
19 Three types of projection then , he wrote , to go with the three rollers on the grinder , the three draft pistons , the three times three malic moulds , the three times three shots .
20 She had been in the winning Nations Cup team in Drammen , Norway , where she also scored her first grand prix success , and , as a result of her achievements , was chosen to go with the British squad on the autumn circuit of North American shows , in Washington , New York and Toronto .
21 Veronica would be working on something to go with the brown shoes and the cardigan .
22 She revealed in London that she wants to go with the Red Cross for a first-hand view of aid work .
23 Cassie could n't see her eyes , but she was sure that they would be almond shaped and green , to go with the sexy red hair and double-cream complexion .
24 You have to choose the correct heights to go with the named bases .
25 So it was last Tuesday night , when the change allowed at the end of our whacky version of five-card rolling draw brought your correspondent the most beautiful five of spades he had ever seen — face down what 's more — to go with the A-2-3-4 he was showing .
26 Perhaps he had believed he was to go with the main reconnaissance party , and having written his last letter did not like to write to me again to cause me what he thought would be further confusion and anxiety .
27 To go with the knedliky Ven had ordered a pork goulash and the two combined were delicious .
28 The pressure of population caused much less concern in the Welsh Border counties where there was still sufficient land available to allow poor immigrants to erect cottages on the wastes and to claim common rights to go with the few acres that they had cleared from the woods or the moors .
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