Example sentences of "[noun] in [noun sg] with " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Nothing illustrates more dramatically the extent to which Nizan 's work fired the imagination than the spectacle of Sartre himself publicly criticising traditional " institutionalised " intellectuals for their lack of imagination , publicly insulting Raymond Aron for his failure to take note of the significance of the May events , and extolling by implication Nizan the youthful iconoclast , an exemplary dissident intellectual in tune with the spirit of the times .
2 The plane had dipped wildly down on its left wing and skidded on the runway with only one wheel in contact with the ground .
3 Once the channel has been selected ( with or without bass shift ) using the requisite button , a patch can be selected and adjustments made using the Data wheel in conjunction with the volume , gain and EQ buttons .
4 We emphasised religion in connection with education and the family , but we should not overlook the importance of the secularisation of society .
5 Yet perhaps the most imaginative and far reaching scheme is the cross-curricular project developed by RFU senior coach and polytechnic lecturer Tony Butlin in conjunction with Walbottle High School and supported by the RFU and the University of Sunderland .
6 Run by the Open College of the Arts in association with the Trust , ‘ The Art of Garden Design ’ aims to introduce the principles of good , small-scale garden planning through a series of practical activities .
7 The region has many characteristics in common with Scotland , perhaps as many as it does with England .
8 Neil , Neil now says , that when he meets a girl , he , he waits to see if she 's got any characteristics in common with the dreadful Vicky , the girl that he eventually fetch her much deserved slosh on the chops and was pulled into Ipswich Magistrates Court , you know , oh I should n't laugh , but erm , he says he looks for those characteristics , and the moment he sees that the girl is going to be this sort of neurotic , excitable , hysterical creature he walks away .
9 The heparin sensitivity of these two promoters led us to study their functional characteristics in comparison with other promoters known to form unstable open complexes .
10 Pre-retirement courses are becoming more common , organized by such bodies as the Pre-Retirement Association and the Workers Educational Association in conjunction with employers .
11 The event was organised by the Northern Ireland Paraplegic Association in conjunction with Disability Action and Tennis Ireland .
12 The Wimpey team will be working in partnership with the Newlon Housing Trust and New Islington and Hackney Housing Association in conjunction with The Housing Corporation to create the 34 homes for rent and shared ownership .
13 That Association in common with outdoor education centres are under severe pressure .
14 B. Chrystal will be asked to set up a meeting under the auspices of the Village Association in connection with the noise and vandalism so prevalent around the school annexe , village hall , public part etc .
15 Confirmation that you are able to complete the deal in accordance with the timetable set out above .
16 Namely , he will be inviting your Lordship to er look at whether or not the business the plaintiff 's would have failed in any event er because it is the defendants case relying er extensively upon the opinion of their expert Mr er that even if the plaintiffs had had the finances which were originally anticipated and had completed the deal in accordance with that , the probabilities are that this business would have failed in any event and that they would have incurred the losses they did er so I anticipate there is going to be a dispute between us as to the basis in which your Lordship is to determine compensation in this case .
17 If we sign a publishing deal in conjunction with a record deal , we usually make the deals co-terminous. so , if we only make one single with a band , we do n't keep the publishing on that act forever .
18 It is not enough to agree a deal in principle with a receiver , the purchaser will have to deliver the cash before anyone else in order to win .
19 Chapters 3–5 deal in turn with the inspiration and interpretation of Scripture and with the two Testaments .
20 Ghofar has a good deal in common with Last Suspect , the 50–1 shot on whom this sagacious Welshman won the 1985 Grand National .
21 Apparently , Randy wanted this guitar to be known as the Concorde' and when you take into account its overall shape and sleek appearance it does have a great deal in common with its British Airways equivalent .
22 From this very brief review of second language learning , it can be seen that BSL acquirers have a great deal in common with those struggling with any spoken language .
23 This strategy of inculcation and for more explicit interventions into the flow of subjective responses , experiences , and pleasures , had a great deal in common with the programme for a renewed Liberalism being developed at this time by L. T. Hobhouse :
24 In particular situations the speech of , say , an academic , particularly if he is saying something he has said or thought about before , may have a great deal in common with written language forms .
25 Despite their distinctiveness , they had a good deal in common with the other upper-class groups ; and they were an important source of loans for the growing group of entrepreneurs .
26 … the speech of , say , an academic , particularly if he is saying something he has said or thought about before , may have a great deal in common with written language forms .
27 ( 1 ) The experience of cinematic viewing — the dark , the succession of images ( ‘ perceptual memories ’ ) , the wonder , the wish fulfilment — has , as Metz ( 1982 , pp. 106–9 ) observed , a very great deal in common with the experience of dreaming and of unconscious processes .
28 Her family still lives in Ostrava and Mrs Welch , who visits them three or four times a year , says the area has a great deal in common with Cleveland .
29 We 've all — take these two poems , we 've all been children ; most people have been in love ; we 're all we all think about our death ; we all think about our parents ; we all like stories and we all like stories that seem , you know , to deal with some primal central human experience , so I do n't think you have to say anything more than what we all know already , that we all have a great deal in common with one another .
30 What are a couple of centuries in comparison with eternity ?
  Next page