Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] with one " in BNC.
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1 | If you invite only three or four , the conversation may become general , and you are likely to be left out , so be bold : invite twenty people , then you can move around , making contact with individuals as you ply them with food and drink , or sit with one person for a short chat before moving on to another . |
2 | This is done by applying pressure to the mastfoot by pulling or pushing with one hand on the mast . |
3 | He was on the move again , whether he had annoyed the proprietor at his cheap hotel by his late night rowdiness , or quarrelled with one of the pimps because the girls staying there posed for him free or simply grown tired of the place , is not clear . |
4 | Or it may be that the question you are interested in has been discussed before , but that you want to develop it in a particular way , or to extend it , or to disagree with one of its premises . |
5 | If I 'm down or arguing with one of the family , because I 've been ratty through not being well , then Pat the physiotherapist , I have a talk with her and she talks to me and it helps me to talk to somebody else . |
6 | Pushing the tyres up again takes more energy and children will soon sort out the lightest or compete with one another to push the heaviest . |
7 | They 're the classic example of a band that thinks with one brain , and if you took one component out it would n't happen . ’ |
8 | In essence , the systems involve diffusing chemicals that interact with one another — hence their name — reaction-diffusion models . |
9 | For one reason , space is almost a vacuum , so that molecules erm are few and far between , and one thing about chemistry it is really the science of not particularly molecules but molecules that react with one another , but here once one has got a molecule in space it does n't actually meet another one for a very long time , so even a molecule that is reactive and which may only last for maybe a microsecond in the laboratory , interstellar space it may last for a thousand years . |
10 | And how better to do it than to collaborate with one of the prime movers behind National Music Day , Mick Jagger , in a concert to celebrate The Blues . |
11 | Even more pointedly , they argue that dealing with one client may increase the burden on others in equal need . |
12 | She had only seen Johnny dressed in what she supposed must be the nineteen forties ' version of casual wear ; but , of course , when he was formally attired he would have worn starched collars with his shirt , detachable and fastened with one of the studs which she now held in her hand . |
13 | Could our good Christian Mrs Dallam possibly expose her daughter , and her friends ' daughters , to a woman like Marie , who has shown herself on a public stage for money , and lived with one man while married to another ? |
14 | He was removing his thick leather belt with one hand and struggling with one of her buttons . |
15 | ( c ) Quarters : the quarters which had also been framed in jigs , panelled up , moulded , glazed and painted with one coat outside , were then erected and secured in position with corner knees . |
16 | The most harmful effects are that groups develop competing or conflicting goals , and lose their ability to communicate and cooperate with one another , |
17 | The way Albert was staring at her , dry and disbelieving with one eyebrow raised , was so maddening ! |
18 | He ate a gargantuan meal , starting with some plovers ' eggs they had overlooked earlier , working on through a few roast geese with a brace or so of ducklings on the side , and ending with one half of a cheese and a couple of bowls of fruit . |
19 | One example is the Marquisate of Bute , which has a family home at Dumfries House , Cumnock , and originated with one of Robert 's illegitimate sons . |
20 | Halve , stone and peel one small avocado , then finely dice and mix with one tablespoon each of French dressing , chopped fresh basil and finely chopped , seeded tomato . |
21 | A direct role where collaboration occurs as a direct result of the teacher 's involvement : the teacher decides when collaboration should occur and why , and sets the processes in motion , for example , by asking children to read and comment on one another 's work , by setting a task structured in such a way that the children need to talk to one another and collaborate with one another in order to accomplish it . |
22 | We would really like to see this thing over and done with one way or another , and to be able to put our case . |
23 | They also dress alike , visit the same cafe for lunch each day , and speak with one voice , a plural ‘ we ’ . |
24 | The book is consistently thought-provoking and written with one eye firmly fixed on the reader 's attention span : each chapter has a different theme and has numerous subsections , each with its own headline . |
25 | And I think , also , it means being open open to one another and open with one another . |
26 | Ripe females will stop and spawn with one or more males of their choice . |
27 | May 20–26 has been designated ‘ One World ’ week by 18 national TV stations : it kicks off with a German production , The World In Our Hands , which highlights global issues from pollution to Third World debt , and ends with One World , One Voice , a two-hour musical chain letter masterminded by Kevin Godley and featuring 150 international musicians . |
28 | It defines a way for applications on networked machines to pass information between themselves , and copes with one of the fundamental problems with distributed systems : namely that networks break and machines go down . |
29 | Roll up carefully from head to tail and secure with one or two cocktail sticks . |
30 | A good mascara should lengthen , curl and separate with one application — the fatter the brush , the thicker and fuller your lashes will be as more colour adheres to it . |