Example sentences of "[conj] with many [noun pl] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | We could say we can divide the world into two , although with many shadings in between : those who marry to avoid their problems and those who marry to tangle with them . |
2 | The prestigious Antiquaires à Paris group of dealers who specialise in eighteenth-century French furniture albeit with many sidelines is back again this year for the first time since 1986 , although with nothing to compare with the extravagantly decorated and richly stocked collective stand which caused so much jealousy then . |
3 | The decade ended with the railway hotels not merely privatised but in many cases under second and third owners , generally poorer in standard and distinctly without the nation having benefited ( since they ran at a profit anyway ) , with Travellers-Fare privatised and healthier ( both profitwise and in what they served ) , and with InterCity rethinking the role of the restaurant car and with many chefs still preparing meals on board . |
4 | In the philosophical theology and religious studies parts of its remit the department maintains close co-operative links with the Centre for the Study of Christianity in the Non-Western World and with many departments in the Faculties of Arts and Social Sciences , such as Philosophy , Sanskrit , Sociology , Celtic . |
5 | The so-called ‘ Loony Left ’ , much invoked before the general election of June 1987 , was in some places responsible if not for vagaries in the total school curriculum , then at least for the expenditure of scarce resources on teachers , and publications , dealing with subjects dear to their hearts , like racism , sexism , and peace-studies , unpopular with government and with many parents . |
6 | And with many rights of way and good marked trails it is also easy to get into the heart of the countryside . |
7 | The next 30 years saw a drop of about 30 per cent , very unevenly distributed and with many fluctuations . |
8 | Regulatory control , however , is concerned for the most part with organizational deviance , and with many activities in which compliance does not reside simply in refraining from an act , but in positively doing something to remedy a state of affairs . |
9 | Bereavement can leave them devastated and with many difficulties . ’ |
10 | Written by an ex-Halton apprentice/RAF Central Flying School graduate , this manual explains the basic manoeuvres in simple language and with many diagrams . |
11 | The mood had changed by the end of the Sixties , and became more romantic , more allusive , softer and with many references to the past , which suited Lagerfeld 's handwriting much more than the brash futuristic Sixties looks had done . |
12 | Secretary Meretta Griffiths said : ‘ With so much work having gone into preparing the 50th anniversary show and with many exhibitors having taken up position we decided that the show should go on . ’ |
13 | Yes , it was rather apt , and going into the cold little room where the piano stood , I played it over — stiffly , and with many mistakes — the words , nevertheless , bringing their own gloomy comfort . |
14 | It is more like a slow process of sifting , in which , by a long series of stages , and with many pauses , grains of one kind tend to come together in a heap ’ . |
15 | ‘ Plans fail for lack of counsel , but with many advisers they succeed . ‘ |
16 | But with many colleges already concerned at lack of accommodation and teaching space , insufficient resources and the prospect of funding by results , will it achieve its aims ? |
17 | Plumage varies from pale to dark , but with many intermediates and no two birds exactly the same Pale form like Hobby but with upperparts more grey-brown and more rufous on heavily streaked underparts . |
18 | I have assumed that the journey is made in a private car , principally following main motor roads but with many deviations and detours to places of special interest . |
19 | The narrator of the Fiction , Philip Parrish , is an orphan living with his uncle but with many brothers scattered elsewhere . |
20 | As with many BOGIES her presence is used to discourage children from misbehaving . |
21 | As with many things , it is the excess which is harmful ; regular exercise can help to reduce this excess and may allow the alterations in eating habits to be a little less drastic . |
22 | As with many things , — at the bottom . |
23 | As with many decisions in television , it is difficult to ascertain the reasons behind non-transmission , but , for the record , Thames Television 's 1976 ‘ Sex In Our Time : For Queer Read Gay ’ , and Southern Television 's 1979/80 ‘ Southern Report : Lesbians ’ , never reached our screens . |
24 | When examined closely , this turns out to be a half-truth , and as with many half-truths , exploring the point at which it breaks down can be instructive . |
25 | With pants , as with many clothes , she has to know the difference between things that are nearly the same — like large waist holes and smaller leg holes — and then match them to her body . |
26 | Lord Lane personally rejected the second appeal of the Birmingham Six in January 1988 saying , in words which returned to haunt him : ‘ As with many cases referred by the Home Secretary to the Court of Appeal , the longer the case has gone on , the more this court has been convinced that the jury was correct . ’ |
27 | A good system for storing electricity will not become possible before 1995 , Meanwhile , the date for artificial intelligence is shunted back 20 years to 2020 and the time for weather control is 2030 instead of 2015 , All kinds of obstacles , not so much technological as human and economic , have interfered with the 1962 predictions , as with many others that people have made with seemingly unimpeachable authority over the past 50 years . |
28 | Ours did n't want to stick ( as with many others ) but hopefully those in the shops will be improved . |
29 | First , as with many civilizations , came hieroglyphics . |
30 | As with many clubs , there were disagreements , one of which led to one of the members being dismissed . |