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

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1 The rest of the breakfasters , who had been gazing on with fascination , returned also to their newspapers , with the exception of Fishbane , on whom Gooseneck now turned .
2 She never got on with Dad , he was too sublime .
3 ‘ What are you going to do today ? ’ he enquired , joining her at the table as without further ceremony they got on with breakfast .
4 He just got on with expansion . ’
5 For a couple of days I got on with life 's rich pageant without thinking any more of Jo or her bloody credit cards .
6 If either or both of her sons had decamped to the West , she 'd have shrugged her shoulders and got on with existence .
7 They both convey information from which the hearer could work out how well B got on with semantics that week .
8 Knitwear suits every mood with a wealth of texture , colour and pattern , layered on with denim in every shape and form — skirts , dresses , jeans and jackets .
9 All of these initiatives as well as the day to day work that goes on with safety representatives at the workplace , supported by officials all of these initiatives are aimed at improving standards at the workplace and we are also contributing to the fourth action programme in Europe where they are setting out their action programme which will take them into the next
10 Only the first was achieved before the collapse of the Society and it was left to Philip Miller to carry on with instruction through his Dictionary .
11 I told her I was frightfully keen to carry on with French .
12 Without the pipeline , or with great delay in its completion , one could see that it would be difficult for the USSR to carry on with business as usual .
13 We would also improve the opportunities for young people to go on with education and training to reach skill levels and qualifications which will match the best in Europe .
14 They have simply not had the chance at school to demonstrate whether or not they are actually able to go on with mathematics .
15 But it was as I got into my teenaged years I began to get bored with my walk on roles , sitting around for hours waiting to go on with make-up and costumes on was no fun any more , but I was far too young to do anything else but walk on say a few lines and walk off again .
16 Psychological work like Gilligan 's , which is liberal , but anchored in a coherent disciplinary tradition , is often fastened on with enthusiasm .
17 Can you two go and sit down with daddy please cos this is getting silly .
18 Go and sit down with daddy please .
19 This is when it is good to sit down with pen and paper and analyse why we are jealous .
20 Another recurrent crisis , during university years , was the cerebral accident — a subarachnoid haemorrhage unambiguous enough for me to sit down with pen and I paper and put my affairs in order .
21 When you have understood the gist of this and talked to your inner teacher about what you need as an individual , you will be able to sit down with paper and write your own script .
22 Diplow Hall , with ‘ its fine elms and beeches , its lilied pond and grassy acres specked with deer ’ , is another idyll until the reader sits down with Grandcourt at his breakfast table .
23 They 're done because the old-fashioned way of doing a , putting something together is a paste-up job , you 've got all these stories filed about all sorts of things , and then some editorial chap or chapess sits down with sort of paste and scissors and cuts the things off , and they tend to cut things off the bottom to make it all fit until it feels about right .
24 ‘ It also fits in with work being carried out at other research centres .
25 The deal fits in with Spring Ram 's belief that bedroom , dining and living room furniture is an important growth area .
26 The new X-terminal offers a large user memory of 30Mb , and fits in with Forefront , Hitachi 's heterogeneous systems integration schema announced in February .
27 Hardman signs in with salute from new boss
28 At school , aged fourteen , I was only just starting to trim the fur off my jaw while some of the Spanish or Arab boys would be tucking in with razor and foam .
29 Andrew watched Virginia peck daintily at her food , remembering how Topaz had tucked in with gusto at the inn where he and Timothy had taken her .
30 Swings often start by touching down with drift in a cross wind and it is worth remembering that , from the point of view of avoiding a bad swing into wind , it is better to overdo the drift correction .
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