Example sentences of "[noun] [verb] with [det] " in BNC.
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1 | Grainne felt her heart thudding with such a fierceness that she could almost imagine he would hear it . |
2 | When the bas-relief on a newly-opened post office was reviewed by The Times , the newspaper 's art correspondent commented with some inspiration , ‘ The design consists of a male and female nude , recumbent , but with a suggestion that they are floating in water . |
3 | Nonetheless , the stimuli and tasks used in dichotic listening research have been almost as varied as the number of investigations undertaken with little or no attempt at proper validation . |
4 | The main aim of their eight-week-long visit is to learn enough to set up a consultancy centre at the university as the Czechs , unused to the rising unemployment they now face , do not have the knowhow to cope with such upheaval . |
5 | A true performer needs patience to cope with all the waiting in the wings and general hanging about while some director chappie takes his pick of the talent . |
6 | You 'll need two of these because we want two O Hs to go with those two O Hs . |
7 | Hampshire director Terry Butler and former NHS deputy chief executive Andrew Foster led the group to assist authorities struggling with some aspects of implementation . |
8 | On each flight to Cyprus six groundcrew were on board to cope with any problems encountered en route and to remove the avionics not included in the sale . |
9 | At normal temperatures most molecules jostle with enough thermal energy ( as kinetic , vibrational and rotational energy ) to overcome this barrier . |
10 | But their efforts to collect the money from Germany met with little success ; and when French and Belgian troops occupied the Ruhr in 1923 in an attempt to force payment , the German economy collapsed amidst wild inflation ( CORE , pp. 6–7 ) . |
11 | Ma agreed with that . |
12 | It is quite common for male birds to mate with several females ( technically known as polygyny , meaning many females ) . |
13 | See how the response goes with this and then |
14 | The burlesquing of the debate over this issue does not simply lie in the Nun 's Priest 's professions of inability to cope with such learned speculations : or in his finally declaring the problem irrelevant : Learned in-joking on one of the authorities on the subject of freewill and providence , Boethius , is also found in the fox 's ability to refer to Boethius ' book on music ( 3293 – 4 ) and the fact that the fox breaks into Chauntecleer 's yard " " By heigh ymaginacioun forncast " " , " Foreseen by High Imagination " ( 3217 ) . |
15 | There is nothing in the black youth 's experience to compare with that of javelin thrower Paul Brice , a white boy , whose father carefully supervised and monitored his training programmes and competitions at considerable financial expense . |
16 | It may be advantageous to both groups to liaise with each other over the monitoring of Little Mill and Fishers Brae corner . |
17 | ‘ Sure , we can adapt and get the ball forward quickly when needs be , but that 's all about having the variety to cope with any situation . |
18 | But she felt curiously light-headed , detached , as if she 'd been pushed too far , and her brain had temporarily given up the struggle to cope with this Alice in Wonderland situation . |
19 | There have been four attempts to grapple with these tensions through restructuring or internal reorganisation . |
20 | In arid country ( r conditions ) the weaver birds , small passerines related to sparrows , tend to be seasonally and sexually dimorphic , to breed polygynously ( one male mated with several females ) , and to have short or capricious breeding seasons . |
21 | I am very proud to have this opportunity to work with all of you , to promote the uniqueness of the voluntary sector . |
22 | ‘ Since you 're having Suzie 's trail pursued with such vigour , perhaps it would be sensible to stay on until my hotel reservation lapses . ’ |
23 | This process of dealing with her impressions was dovetailed into her everyday tasks without the two activities interfering with each other . |
24 | The storm erupted with all its force into the reception area in a whirling , roaring maelstrom of disintegrating glass shards and a wild , bellowing fury of nightmarish , mutated flesh and flailing claws . |
25 | When we stopped and slowly turned , with our bulging eyes in place , the gang scattered with such blood-curdling screams that we wondered if we had n't overdone it , and felt sufficiently ashamed of ourselves never to use the eyes again . |
26 | At worst , they merely signal a reluctance or inability to grapple with those problems . |
27 | In Caithness there are many upright monoliths from the Bronze Age , some standing alone , others in patterns suffused with some ancient significance . |
28 | To resolve the problem that most organisations have multiple networks that communicate using different network protocols , the multiprotocol networking software in Oracle7 is designed to enable any client computer to communicate with any server or group of server computers in the network , regardless of network protocol . |
29 | On an untitled piece by Richard Downes and Thomas Roper , it reads ‘ Two performers interact with each other using two heavy concrete curves as a channel for their communication . ’ |
30 | It is a privilege to work with such dedicated enthusiasts — but — we still need more group members in the Midlands . |