Example sentences of "[adv] [vb infin] with [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | So , the final stage in Darwin 's argumentation concerns how a species meeting those three criteria would eventually arise with prolonged isolation and divergence . |
2 | We 'd better win with that . |
3 | Natural selection favours the habit in stickleback males because female sticklebacks will only mate with territorial males . |
4 | But you can make it different , George , if you 'll only cooperate with this television thing . |
5 | Anil Kumble took four of the seven wickets to fall today and England could only quibble with one of them — when Graeme Hick looked to have been wrongly given out for 47 , caught off bat-and-pad at short leg . |
6 | But a Churchill of whom I can only speak with deep affection is Randolph 's son , Winston . |
7 | He 's a sound jumper already and can only improve with more experience . |
8 | This did n't matter so much for physiological or anatomical studies , where one could only work with small numbers of animals anyhow ; but for biochemistry , when larger numbers were needed , it made progress very slow . |
9 | DEC ( Digital ) will only work with educational institutions if the project is of advantage to the broader community and not just for the benefit of the school or college . |
10 | It was like the blackout , which Charles could suddenly remember with great clarity . |
11 | For some reason she could only move with nightmarish sluggishness , while everyone around her tore past with dizzying speed . |
12 | Less than two centuries ago , when the English Romantics saw the Alps they could only stare with wild surmise . |
13 | ‘ . These figures do not necessarily correlate with increased market power , however , there being evidence to indicate that aggregate concentration and concentration in individual industries have not increased since the mid-1970's . |
14 | Evans-Pritchard and others have also pointed out that the divisions between scientific and non-scientific thinking as such , if they can indeed be reliably established , do not necessarily correlate with different social groups . |
15 | Jack Butler closed the door , turned and leant against it , as if afraid that she might suddenly return with more horrors . |
16 | Like the inner London boroughs that were , and the Inner London Education Authority which adopted an extremely dictatorial attitude — well that 's all right , I do n't necessarily disagree with that — but a very a very expensive attitude with it . |
17 | By giving the vote to some ten million electors this élite had discovered that the people 's will did not necessarily correspond with those of their masters and Louis-Napoleon had reaped the benefit as the people 's choice . |
18 | It is clear from this that periods when enclosure was taking place do not necessarily correspond with those when articulate protests were being voiced against them . |
19 | On several occasions when their views have been canvassed , the judges of the High Court and the Court of Appeal have shown themselves capable of contemplating changes that do not necessarily coincide with popular or professional opinion . |
20 | British vital interests might not necessarily coincide with those of the Americans as Suez had shown all too clearly . |
21 | Now their country has become a prison which they can only leave with special permission — a situation which is guaranteed to fuel bitterness and resentment against the hardline regime . |
22 | This will obviously vary with many factors , including the nature of the product , the price paid and so on . |
23 | A warden can perhaps cope with one or two dementia sufferers . |
24 | I think obviously erm as they 've already shown when they came over last year , that they are very very big , very physical , and erm there are there are erm a fast pacy outfit , but erm I think erm obviously with the players that are selected , that we can obviously cope with that . |
25 | People with progressively severe impairments , due to illness such as multiple sclerosis or rheumatoid arthritis , must constantly cope with new problems . |
26 | From the fact that it was chosen by lot , with the further provision that no one might serve on it more than two years in his life , it is clear that the Athenians of the fifth and fourth centuries intended that the council should have no chance of developing a corporate sense , which would enable it to take on an independent life , and wished it to be merely a fair sample of the Athenian people , whose views would naturally coincide with those of the people . |
27 | You can not only experiment with different feet positions and weighting but also with the angle at which the feet are placed across the board . |
28 | He repeatedly uses the pronoun ‘ She ’ along with ‘ her ’ and describes the train 's movements such as ‘ bouncing ’ which one would normally only connect with human activity but here it enables one to envisage in one 's mind a picture of a regal figure ‘ gliding like a queen ’ down the tracks of the railway . |
29 | ‘ They 'll only play with four . |
30 | For example , goods lawfully produced in one member state need not necessarily comply with all the technical standards applied in the various member states into which they are imported ( such as the German prohibition on the sale of beer containing even harmless artificial additives ) . |