Example sentences of "[adv] [vb pp] with [det] " in BNC.
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1 | Seventeen trains a day , mostly filled with such meat , left Birkenhead Station . |
2 | National flags , where still seen , are rarely flown with any respect . |
3 | Social tension , as we shall see , is an assessment of social relations that springs readily to the lips of anthropologists but is rarely examined with much psychological sophistication , or even an awareness that it is a psychological phenomenon as well as a social one . |
4 | One patient experienced a bleeding episode associated with a treatment induced ulcer 10 days after the initial treatment , which was successfully treated with another injection . |
5 | Even in this era of psycho-history , it is impossible to think of any other historical character of note whose public persona has been so submerged , and private morality so relentlessly pursued with such ruthless subjectivity on the part of those who have written about her . |
6 | And I only hope that in the end our roads will become so clogged with all these fume-belching cars and lorries that everyone will give them up and start going by train again . |
7 | Seven Types of Ambiguity , on the other hand , is entirely occupied with this sort of explanation , through the ‘ verbal analysis ’ of ambiguity in poetry , ambiguity being defined ( in the second edition ) as ‘ any verbal nuance , however slight , which gives room for alternative reactions to the same piece of language ’ ( Empson 1965 : 1 ) . |
8 | sliced raw mushroom dipped in lemon juice and a slice of lean ham ; or a slice of lean ham , chopped and mixed with 2 tablespoons plain virtually fat-free fromage frais and 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard , on a bed of shredded red cabbage ; or diced cooked chicken breast , diced red or green pepper , a chopped pineapple ring , 1 teaspoon tomato purée ; all mixed with enough plain virtually fat-free yoghurt to moisten ; or bread spread with tomato purée topped with shredded lettuce and lean , grilled back bacon — visible fat removed . |
9 | His voice was thickly clogged with some primitive emotion she assumed was rage . |
10 | whether they would go on with the scheme or with a part of it , having the public offices in a well-devised and properly-arranged manner , all connected with each other , instead of being , as now , disconnected . |
11 | The pieces that work best are those that are harmonious with the wood 's properties of strength and grain , and not battling to impose a feat of engineering that might be better made with some other material . |
12 | If the claims of some expert system designers are true , aspects of the jobs of many kinds of expert , such as doctors , oil prospectors , and research chemists can be better done with such machines . |
13 | De Niro 's diner has been so eagerly anticipated with some magazines printing details of the menu months in advance that it has nearly overshadowed Tribeca Productions , which has quietly put together an impressive list of future projects . |
14 | As Palmerston put it in the mid-19th century , ministers , especially the Prime Minister , must be able to defend themselves in Parliament daily , ‘ and in order to do this they must be minutely acquainted with all the details of the business of their offices , and the only way of being constantly armed with such information is to conduct and direct those details themselves ’ . |
15 | It has in the past happened that a client has been advised by the agent to amend an order , has entirely agreed with that advice , but has at the same time pointed out that his authority does not extend to giving a final decision , and this can be awkward . |
16 | Corman naturally agreed with this assessment and is not saying whether or not it was the way he and Nicholson intended it . |
17 | The relative risk of impaired glucose tolerance and diabetes , for example , was six times higher in men with birth weights of 5.5 pounds ( 2495 g ) or less compared with those with birth weights of more than 9.5 pounds ( 4309 g ) . |
18 | ‘ There was no way this lady could breathe because the air way was totally blocked because it was so packed with this material , ’ Dr Wayte said . |
19 | Hare ( 1973 ) has suggested ( see also p. 111 ) that this is because fluvial processes tend to be dominated by extreme events rather than balance relationships , and that the geomorphic time-scale is very long compared with that appropriate for climatic processes , although glaciology is in a very different situation . |
20 | ‘ I arrive home after an absence of four weeks to discover that my nephew , my only sister 's eldest child , has apparently eloped with some teenage siren , to the distress of his parents and the possible detriment of his career . |
21 | Clearly it is impossible to give each of these the attention they merit and I do find EMI makes life extremely complicated with such a plethora of titles ; although each clearly has its place in the EMI scheme of things . |
22 | If the site is promising enough compared with all others , then , and only then , would we consider funding an underwater project . |
23 | Churches long sealed with all their histories in them were to be opened to me this day . |
24 | Epstein as he listened leant towards Brahe , and Brahe as he spoke leant towards Epstein , and they were so involved with each other , and in any case the engine noise was so continuous and enveloping , like the air , that no-one , behind them , could have heard anything ! |
25 | For those whose grounds are not naturally endowed with these facilities , Paul Decker provides , in 1759 , ‘ Gothic Architecture Decorated , Consisting of a Large Collection of Temples , Banqueting , Summer and Green Houses ; Gazebo 's , Alcoves ; Faced , Garden and Umbrello 'd Seats ; Terminari 's , and Rustic Garden Seats ; Rout Houses , and Hermitages for Summer and Winter ; Obelisks , Pyramids , & c . ’ . |
26 | The siege of Burghley House is well documented by a member of Cromwell 's army , but there is no mention of any threatened destruction of the house or the town — which was apparently taken with little resistance — nor of the intercession of Lady Wingfield . |
27 | We were both greatly taken with this lady , who after much questioning gave Nigel a thorough physical examination , and more X-rays were taken . |
28 | Initially , however , finding an appropriate register is likely to involve accentuating aspects of what you already see as " your own voice " , perhaps combined with some degree of imitation of one or more voices you like . |
29 | Frankly , we are hoping you will be so taken with this first volume that you will want to own additional leather-bound editions from The 100 Greatest Books Ever Written . |
30 | So taken with this image was former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher that she let it be known throughout the realm that Marks & Spencer was the place she bought her underwear . |