Example sentences of "is [adv] [verb] to [noun] with " in BNC.

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1 She is slowly coming to terms with her past and exorcising the ghosts .
2 The pre-tax figure was above City expectations and gave evidence that the bank is finally coming to grips with its bad-debt problem .
3 Fortunately , ex-Prisoner James Taylor is aware of the problem and is finally coming to terms with it after five albums of patchy solo meanderings .
4 Fortunately , ex-Prisoner James Taylor is aware of the problem and is finally coming to terms with it after five albums of patchy solo meanderings .
5 If incorrectly fitted , it is soon ripped to bits with even gentle off roading .
6 The protection is not confined to interference with contracts of employment but where the contract affected is not a contract of employment , there are restrictions on the use of ‘ secondary action . ’
7 Couples , second in the Sony rankings to Faldo , is still coming to terms with the adulation heaped on him after Augusta but is prepared to run the gauntlet again if it means winning a second Major .
8 This is when the pupil is still coming to terms with using a low vision aid and is not yet skilful in its use , but needs to read text and notes that are too advanced in content to be available in the large print of junior and early reading books .
9 The local community is still coming to terms with the loss of the Trident contract four months ago .
10 The word processing market is rapidly coming to terms with desktop publishing , particularly on the PC .
11 Now Giggs is quickly coming to terms with the facts of life .
12 And the ‘ trade dispute ’ itself — the central concept of the system of immunities — is now confined to disputes with a worker 's own employer only and to disputes which relate wholly or mainly to the industrial conditions of the workers in that employment unit only .
13 One of the most socially valued roles in contemporary society — being a parent — is regularly denied to people with learning difficulties .
14 The sanding plate wo n't rip or tear , and is simply attached to tools with a self-adhesive backing .
15 This explanation is then offered to others with the intention of getting them to agree that circumstances conspired to prevent you from performing with the excellence and flair that you would , in the normal course of events , have displayed .
16 The union , which is currently coming to terms with 7,000 job losses among railway workers , accused BR bosses of going back on guarantees made in 1984 .
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