Example sentences of "[noun] with [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 American travellers became stranded in Europe and turned into expatriates or exiles in Henry James 's novels , shadowy amalgamation of foreign manners with shreds of familiar accents that were up to the narrator to decipher , but it could n't happen to her , not in 1928 , even with a crash .
2 Because Wirral , as an urban borough with areas of high social need , was eligible for additional central funds from the Department of Environment 's Inner Area Programme , it was able to allocate funds rapidly to finance this .
3 Wordsworth concludes The Prelude with tributes to his sister Dorothy , and to S. T. Coleridge , both of whom , in their different ways , helped him to resolve the personal crisis into which the events of the 1790s had led him , and I have given a short biography of each .
4 Sections of the catholic — nationalist population have also combined their own popular nationalism and religion with aspects of the clerical interpretation already invested in the law , particularly in the anti-abortion movement of the early 1980s .
5 Asthma , heart conditions , diabetes or epilepsy may expose you to special risks with watersports in the heat .
6 She balanced periods of intense isolation with others of frantic social activity , because that was what her nature demanded .
7 On the day of the removal , board any pets with friends for the day , it is too upsetting for them and , anyway , dogs and cats might be under your feet .
8 Fans turned up to gigs in ridiculous anoraks , sold fanzines with names like Frothy Pop and pretended they were carefree 18-year-olds .
9 This is because they sing songs with titles like ‘ Love Girdle ’ , which , so the singer tells us , ‘ is about being in love with , well , a fat girl . ’
10 This remarkable and rapid growth was attributable to a relatively small group of full-time tutors and organising secretaries resident in these counties who demonstrated over several years the importance of their roles , personal qualities and ‘ … their intimate association with members of branches and groups , which , in its turn , comes only from … active sympathy with those ends which they seek to achieve through adult education ’ .
11 Sidney Lee in his life of Shakespeare , 1908 edition , attributes his accurate use of legal terms to observation of his father 's legal battles and early association with members of the Inns of Court and there is also a suggestion that on his arrival in London he may have been employed as a clerk for a lawyer .
12 Queen Victoria had been overjoyed at her son the Prince of Wales 's marriage to Alexandra , because of the increasing scandal of the Prince 's bed-hopping and association with women of loose morals .
13 But there is some evidence of his association with liberals at Cambridge which must be mentioned briefly at this point , since it seems rather unlikely that he would have visited France in 1790 and again in 1791–2 if he had no sympathy with what was going on there .
14 The link between constructs 4 and 5 shows how an attribute such as the sense of stillness evokes an association with feelings of civilization in this particular picture .
15 Otherwise , the design of the curriculum was left formally to local education authorities , and in practice largely to head teachers — in association with governors after the 1986 Education Act ( see Chapter 4 ) .
16 Studies of large-scale dynamics are undertaken in association with groups from other UK universities using both simple and state-of-the-art computer models .
17 Association with colleagues after working hours could be taken as an indication of the priority given to company matters but it may be reluctantly undertaken .
18 The work of developing tests and achievement criteria was carried out in association with schools in 19 LEAs .
19 Increasingly solicitors from England and Wales are entering into business and association with counterparts throughout the Community .
20 Several rhynchosaurs have been found in association with fragments of plants ( though it is not possible to say from a juxtaposition of fossils whether those fragments were ever inside the animal ) and the diet probably consisted of leaves , stems , fruit and seeds of seed-ferns , conifers , ginkgos , equisitales ( horsetails ) and ferns ( Figure 2 ) .
21 The narrator then goes on to tell of this divorcee , Brenda Goring , who arrives in their village and who latches on to his quite mouse of a wife , whom he dearly loves , fills her ears with tales of the fast life she has always led and still leads in visits to London and , worse , is always to be found in his home when he gets back exhausted from the office .
22 ‘ By taking your stock to the market or to the shows you can compare your stock with others around you . ’
23 I have stock with grandparents from pure Dutch-bred sheep bred in Belgium , and Belgian breeders do buy some stock themselves from Holland . ’
24 Do I have to wear one of them velvet caps with knobs on ? ’
25 When the two types unite in a new amalgamated cell the genes are once again in two sets but in new combinations with genes from not just one parent but two .
26 He bombarded Burghley with schemes for exploiting Newfoundland in 1585 and 1586 , interestingly proposing the financing of one of them on the tontine principle , but they involved impractical proposals , as the international fishery could not be controlled by any one country except at vast expense .
27 Mike , however , had travelled north , leaving his pregnant girlfriend with relatives in the safety of a Harare suburb as he went looking for another war .
28 We will have our own style of sports journalism — and news about the arts with items throughout the day .
29 He has received a card with drawings of gangsters on it and threats of a ‘ warm welcome ’ if he turns up for the second-round tie .
30 Imagine a record card with boxes for different kinds of information : name , address , telephone number , age , sex , estimated income , creditworthiness .
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