Example sentences of "do with the [adj] [noun] of " in BNC.

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1 Your Alexander teacher will show you how this can be done with the minimum amount of effort .
2 Property speculators in particular are addressing themselves to the question of what is to be done with the vast stretches of land once occupied by watch towers , border guards , dogs and rabbits .
3 Imagine what might be done with the collected works of Alexander Hamilton when the Founding Fathers project eventually provides them on CD-ROM sometime in the not too distant future .
4 ‘ It seems to me that both you and Peter could have done with the friendly shoulder of a mother to pour out your troubles to — you 're reliving something from your past .
5 But there is much work to be done with the econometric modelling of rational expectations and of innovative behaviour in financial markets before their policy implications can be fully understood .
6 This was done with the frigid politeness of two people who do not like each other , know they do not like each other , but have never let that dislike come out into the open .
7 This must be done with the prior approval of the Council of Ministers or its Executive Committee " .
8 A good indication of what was passing through his mind in the aftermath of Barricades Week is provided by a letter that he wrote to his son in mid-February : " we had to be done with the impertinent pressure of the European population in Algiers , with the hard core of politicians which was forming in the army , and finally with the myth of " French Algeria " which merely disguises the desire of the " pieds noirs " to maintain their domination over the Muslims …
9 The removal of safety devices to speed up production , for instance , is often done with the tacit connivance of supervisors .
10 In the Chilean case , as is well known , this was done with the active collaboration of the US government and TNCs .
11 I also swear that what I do is done with the full knowledge of Bishop Wishart ! ’
12 This will be done with the full cooperation of C3 Division of the Home Office , the Lord Chancellor 's Department and the Crown Prosecution Service all of whom have agreed to grant access to the relevant documentation in relation to cases during the first five years of the Act 's operation .
13 There must be some act done with the deliberate intention of doing harm to the trespasser , or at least some act done with reckless disregard of the presence of the trespasser .
14 Why not leave slogging through all that real-time stuff to the critics , and just make do with the flashy emptiness of the trailer ?
15 Having released a highly successful book of Russian posters the renowned publisher Aurora , which publishes books for export , does not know what to do with the rich reserve of editorial material it has accumulated over recent years , and it has been forced to sell transparencies and texts .
16 The crimes which had been committed were manifestly the work of hardened professionals who had no more to do with the incestuous dramas of this city than Zen himself .
17 Moreover , it tended to present a view of practice as constituted largely of issues to do with the visual appearance of classrooms and matters of organization relating to children 's grouping .
18 A third reason has to do with the non-experimental character of most social research .
19 The Communist Party Central Committee complained in February 1932 : The Minority Movement is a small self-absorbed organization of leaders who have nothing to do with the real struggle of the workers and who instead of going to the workers , working among them and fighting against the reformist leaders in the Trade Unions , simply approach the workers with the invitation to take part in a highly elaborate organisational structure .
20 Speculation now had little to do with the real progress of companies : the buying and selling of shares had become an end in itself .
21 He stared at those closest him , trying to make some sense of the complex chains of symbols , then shrugged ; it was an alien language , all this , yet he had a sense that these shapes — the spirals and branching trees , the clusters and irregular pyramids-had something to do with the complex chemistry of the human body .
22 Privatization of this sort has less to do with increased public choice by individual consumers and more to do with the cheaper provision of a standard service .
23 ‘ Well , as the blood groups have little to do with the poor matches of HLA , I see no reason to tell Alan anything .
24 Perceptual skills by contrast are developments to do with the greater selectivity of information needed to monitor situations and guide actions .
25 Although , as we shall see , citizenship has much to do with the individual rights of citizens , the concept lacks the implication of liberal individualism often associated with ‘ human rights ’ and found objectionable by many on the political left .
26 This suggests that tantrums have something to do with the normal development of a child 's personality , rather than with the way they have been brought up — although the way they are handled can make things worse .
27 It 's got nothing to do with mortality but it 's to do with the great beauty of the colour of raw meat ’ .
28 What gets investment and what is shown has far more to do with the economic stranglehold of the Hollywood studios and the distribution/exhibition chains .
29 The desire for natural religion reflected an awareness that religious faith has to do with the inner life of human beings , that it connects up with profound needs , drives and searchings at the core of our existence .
30 What had all this got to do with the cruel terrors of Spiderglass that kept Mars-U as a garden of torture ( she could n't even think of the garden-master ; somehow he just kind of disappeared from her mind ) so it could pluck poor students into its web of inhumanity ?
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