Example sentences of "be [verb] [adv prt] with [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I am to remain ill and without treatment , I am to carry on with the exhausting task of caring for an old and senile woman . ’
2 6/Highlights are masked out while areas are filled in with a thin wash .
3 The dots are filled in with the appropriate names like this :
4 A number of investigations are carried out with the scaled-up analyser to determine what factors can lead to improvement in performance .
5 Not for the first time this year , Seles had been let off with a mere slap on the wrist .
6 These people are going into the familiar local stores where they shop and are walking out with the American dream they could never afford on a minimum wage .
7 The whole process has been carried out with the full knowledge and support of the Essex Cricket Association and Essex County Cricket Club .
8 ‘ We are fed up with a distant bureaucracy telling us what to do with our bikes .
9 ‘ A lot of people are fed up with a whole range of changes which appear to have no philosophical direction to them , ’ he said .
10 BORED kids are fed up with the long summer holiday and ca n't wait to go back to school , according to a new survey .
11 It 's the time when the final pellets of vanity accumulate into a cyst , when the self starts up its last pathetic murmur of ‘ Remember me , remember me … ‘ ; it 's the time when the autobiographies get written , the last boasts are made , and the memories which no one else 's brain still holds are written down with a false idea of value .
12 The pair have also been selected along with the Scottish champion , Janice Moodie ( Windyhill ) , for the Hermitage Scratch Cup , to be played at The Hermitage , Dublin , on 2 May .
13 But while you 're keeping up with the latest ‘ squirrel-proof ’ bird feeders and designer nest-boxes , do keep a critical eye open , too .
14 our next stop is over in Herefordshire at Ross on Wye … we 're meeting up with a young tennis player who 's won himself a place at the world 's top coaching clinic … the story of Tim Bibby is our Friday Feature
15 ‘ So you 're going out with the black kid , the messenger ? ’
16 Yeah yeah yeah and they they 're coming back with the three separate quotes .
17 And he frets too that son Rob and daughter Heather are growing up with a part-time father .
18 When the last mince pie had gone and the last slice of plum pudding had been washed down with the last drop of Madeira , the children were sent up to recapture the sleep of which Father Christmas ' bounty had robbed them .
19 Course I di I did n't get to know much else but it was obvious you see , she 'd been going out with a young man , her husband was in the Forces and er she 'd tried to get rid of it .
20 When she was nineteen she had been going out with a steady boyfriend for three years , and they had decided to get married .
21 ‘ I 've been going out with the same person for five years , ’ he reveals .
22 Outlines and details are drawn in with a Rotring pen .
23 Outlines and details are drawn in with a Rotring pen .
24 The interests of the overwhelming majority of professional people , small business men , shopkeepers and farmers are bound up with the social progress of the Labour and Democratic Movements .
25 We are moving on with the medical services .
26 The shift in the importance and growth of manufacturing within the national economy has been bound up with a similar change in the geography of manufacturing .
27 Tonight she would far rather have been getting on with a hundred and one other things , but conscience had dictated that she must get the books finished first .
28 They 're occupying themselves writing out an account of their movements since Lorrimer was last seen alive and the local force are getting on with the preliminary checking of alibis .
29 Environmentalists have complained that in contrast to road-building programmes , for example , no attempt has been made to assess the cost of intangible environmental losses to the community , as against financial benefits to the farmer ; that calculations of benefit have assumed unrealistic yields and excessively speedy rates of take-up by farmers ; that there is a reluctance to design low-level flood protection , even when farmers are getting by with an arable crop in most years ; that the inevitable patching of eroding banks as a river reacts to the engineering constraints put upon it is never allowed for in the costs ; and that the benefits anticipated from a drainage schemes are based on what are known as ‘ farm-gate prices ’ received by farmers for their crops .
30 a wide variety of travel texts and periodicals to supplement sets of specialist textbooks are provided along with an adequate supply of up to date technical directories , guides and brochures to support practical exercises and assignments .
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