Example sentences of "they [verb] [adv prt] with the [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 At Podromanija they met up with the Swedish relief convoy of 10 trucks , 9½ being filled with food and the remainder with medical supplies .
2 The children marched down the stairs , the nun coming behind , and in the hall they met up with the older girls and , now forming two files , they walked , hands joined as if in prayer , slowly along a corridor , and into the chapel .
3 Gone are the days when professionals left the business of fees , commissions , variation charges , reimbursables and the rest to underlings whilst they got on with the interesting work .
4 Rejected in the former , they press on with the latter .
5 He would n't want anything to do with her once they caught up with the missing pair .
6 Microsoft Corp chairman Bill Gates reportedly came up with an ingenious solution when he was romancing venture capitalist Ann Winblad : observing that the same movies are usually playing at the same time all over America , they came up with the Virtual Date — they 'd each go alone to the same movie at the same time , and discuss it afterwards on their car phones .
7 But no , Bill then gave them another chance and another meeting , this time 120 skaters went along , and they came up with the following ramps : 20ft wide 6ft tall spine ramp , with the spine itself being 12 ft wide [ the other 8ft bit being platform ] , and another 12 ft wide mini ramp , plus street stuff like fun boxes etc .
8 They came up with the Militant Clergy Association , which is understood to be moderate , and the Militant Clerics Society , which is described as left-wing fundamentalist .
9 They came up with the same answer as I did , ’ said Mr Hope .
10 They tie in with the large number of adjectives which emphasize ugliness and torpor : raw , rough , ragged , forsaken , stagnant , dishevelled , etc .
11 ‘ But not about the caves , ’ she laughed and , tugging at his arm , she insisted they tag on with the other tourists .
12 Alresford lifted the siege when Clarke kicked a penalty from fully 40 metres , and they followed up with the decisive try .
13 Instead , to their own imagined advantage , they fell in with the renewed Drang nach Osten .
14 However , they went along with the many changes in the hope that the increasing emphasis on training might help our young people to find jobs .
15 So why do they put up with the real foreigners ?
16 Depends on whether they come up with the same results .
17 They come up with the Big Ideas and build the organizations — the Big Machines — that turn them into reality .
18 They carried through with the original orders .
19 When arrived in that part of the Atlantic , they fall in with the Westerly winds , which generally blow two-thirds of the year in that tract ; which may help to convey them to the shores of the Hebrides and Orkneys .
20 When arrived in that part of the Atlantic , they fall in with the Westerly winds , which generally blow two-thirds of the year in that tract ; which may help to convey them to the shores of the Hebrides and Orkneys .
21 If they fiddle around with the short-term situation that will not enable them to win ; it will not enable them to get a better general election performance .
22 There are only the smallest of delicately dropped clues as to how and why they ended up with the social skills of a herd of rhinos .
23 I think somebody had sort of started pricing them and then somebody else had probably took over and they ended up with the wrong price on but I did n't mind !
  Next page