Example sentences of "[verb] with [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | As do higher-order animals , as anyone who lives with a cat or a dog will confirm . |
2 | He is refused hospitality by the rich village priest , who lives with a concubine . |
3 | Now he earns £75 a week as a filing clerk , lives with a cousin and attends Narcotics Anonymous meetings . |
4 | attendance allowances for members , I would move that er , a scheme be commenced from the first of April ninety-four , and that the wording attached to the paper , be altered in two respects , in place of the phrase is a person over sixty-nine years of age , the words is an elderly person , and more significantly at the end of paragraph four , and normally lives with a member as part of the member 's family and be able to be left at th , be unable to be left unsupervised , be added , And that er , power to delegate a director of financial to amend the rates of allowances from time to time rates of attendance allowance for members , and that the scheme be met from the overall member 's allowance to which we recently referring . |
5 | If the person lives with a family member with whom he has an intense relationship , characterised by a high level of criticism and overinvolvement , his risk of relapse is much higher than it would be in a less intense atmosphere ( Brown et al. , 1972 ; Leff and Vaughn , 1981 ) . |
6 | When everyone in the country lives with the prospect of having their house destroyed by a bomb during the night , the Christian talk of Armageddon seems less fanciful than in the ‘ weak piping times of peace ’ . |
7 | Glenn Ross has done wonders with a player like fly-half John Steele but the man who has put Northampton on the map almost single handed is unquestionably Wayne Shelford . |
8 | We 've attempted to design a system which is friendly in that it takes account of the different needs that a person will have at different times while trying to communicate with a computer . |
9 | The PC Scan uses a SCSI interface to communicate with the PC and so its adaption to the Macintosh is a foregone conclusion . |
10 | Firstly , it would make it easier for users who are unfamiliar with keyboards to communicate with the computer by using their normal handwriting . |
11 | They lack the experience and practice which gives them the ability to communicate with the public : they lack common sense . |
12 | They should include plans to communicate with the public and media . |
13 | Like recent commercials by British Nuclear Fuels , the tenor of the campaign was to present Nuclear Electric as being open and willing to communicate with the public . |
14 | While the physical interface , in one form or another , is supplied as a matter of course the user is still forced to communicate with the system by means of a very artificial language . |
15 | They were able to communicate with the part of us that longs to grow and expand into the world . |
16 | Intellectual stimulation was not easy , but the care manager came up with a group of volunteers , all of them computer buffs , who were able to communicate with the man on his level . |
17 | The Doctor tried to communicate with the slave in English , but received no response . |
18 | In fact , we can turn the apparent paradox on its head : what would happen if the people of the future decided not to communicate with the past , despite the fact that their histories told them that they were going to ? |
19 | However , it was not simply a strategy , but embodied a particular ideology : the belief that the bishops were the church above all , and that they , not the laity , were the ones to communicate with the state . |
20 | THE TYPICAL programmer sees a modern computer in terms of one or more high-level languages , together with a command language which he must use to communicate with the operating system . |
21 | There would be no point in designing software to control access to the video disc , unless suitable interfaces are also available to make it possible for the computer in the system to communicate with the video disc player and control its operation . |
22 | Can you help me maybe , by discovering his whereabouts , and perhaps persuading him — through a third party if necessary — to return to his home , or to communicate with the prison officials here ? |
23 | You learned to keep the feeling high , to communicate with the energy of your reader . |
24 | The Council permitted the laity to communicate with the cup on a very few occasions . |
25 | Many composers now crave the chance to write operas , but will they acknowledge the duty to communicate with the audience ? |
26 | ‘ With Joan Armatrading , we did 2–3000 seaters , and that just worked fantastically , especially as I like to communicate with the audience , and people these days are n't used to that . |
27 | During the beginning of the first set , Toni feeling the desire to communicate with the audience , commenced with the question , ’ How many of you took Ecstasy last year ? ’ |
28 | Medau teachers support and direct their classes in much the same way as a conductor does an orchestra — first they perform the movement to feel the accent , shape and dynamics , then begin to communicate with the class through voice , before developing the rhythmic possibilities with claps , clicks , drumbeats , other percussive sounds , improvised piano music or recorded music . |
29 | She felt a momentary triumph and something approaching relief , as if Amy had at last consented to communicate with the world . |
30 | In some ways it is better to communicate with the client and say that nothing has happened , than not to communicate with the client because nothing has happened . |