Example sentences of "[adj] with [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 If I could draw members attention to the supplementary papers erm and it 's page three which is the second report and it will become I will make it clear with regards to the er linking up of the two reports , both museums and Essex committee linked up to the museum registration .
2 The floor would be clear with crucks across the middle of most of the buildings supporting purlins and a ridge-piece .
3 Despite the fact that the Whitney Museum was the first to show the photographs of the notorious late Robert Mapplethorpe , and only recently declared that it was creating a department of photography , the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation announced last month that it was the Guggenheim it would be patronising with gifts in money and kind .
4 ‘ Building societies are being approached almost daily with offers of this kind , ’ he claims .
5 Outside the boutiques were still aglow with heaps of motley flung about the feet of the disdainful assistants .
6 Lang has also played a part in the admission of rock and graffiti to the cultural fold and given a helping hand to the young unemployed with subsidies for their participation on archaeological digs .
7 There 's nothing badly wrong with blokes like these -they
8 What can go wrong with partnerships between colleges and industry ?
9 It may well be there is nothing wrong with hops in this form except that I find that brewers who use them , such as Whitbread and Charles Wells , produce beers with a bitterness that is a shade too harsh for my liking .
10 Alternatively , pairs of vertical timbers in holes in the ground clasped horizontal members with wattle and daub infilling , or the uprights were staggered with panels of inter-woven wattles between them .
11 The borders are a soft fusion of pink and blue with grey and purple foliage , and in a climate that explores most permutations of grey , she adds light with splashes of primrose
12 That was certainly the prevalent mood when England , confident of again sorting out the beleaguered Irish , and at least making the French work for the Five Nations Cup , took the field at Lansdowne Road with a side apparently brimful with Lions for New Zealand .
13 I noted with envy the gold-embossed timber mansions of the merchants , the stalls in front of them piled high with goods of every kind : rich cloth of gold , rolls of murrey , silks and satins , leather bottles , Spanish riding boots , gold cord and testers , blankets of pure wool , and tapestries heavy with silver needlework and gold filigree .
14 I trailed behind them , looking at a fountain , a mule piled high with skeins of brilliant , dyed wool , at children monotonously working shuttles in a weaver 's shop .
15 The shop was piled high with rolls of materials .
16 The ‘ take-away ’ industry has grown suddenly and dramatically , as has the consumption of vast quantities of junk foods — you only have to look at all those supermarket trolleys piled high with packets of crisps and cans of fizzy drink .
17 Interviewers visited them weekly with catalogues of brands and prices .
18 Yet for years I have made free with opinions about floating the pound , shadowing the mark , sinking the dollar , and effect on the £ of entering Europe , devaluation , and the various devices that are wheeled out every year for the Budget .
19 A travel grant is available and accommodation will be provided free with families in Troisdord .
20 This standpoint is gathered up with others in a book which is free with descriptions of creditable and discreditable dealings on the part of those of that persuasion .
21 The butcher , who was gentle and warmhearted in spite of the cruel bloodstains on his boater , loaded her basket free with bones for the dog and offered to show her the mysteries of his store room where , shaggy with frost , the sides of meat hung in refrigerated darkness .
22 This statement needs treating with care , as it was written after 1016 , by an annalist rather free with allegations of treachery , who was aware of Eadric 's defection to Cnut in 1015 .
23 He explained : ‘ We are dealing direct with merchants over there and as far as we are aware they are very keen to import fish , such as small whiting , which they ca n't get from their own fishermen .
24 We dealt direct with BSI at Milton Keynes for whom it was also a new experience — they had not had any previous registrations from purley health-based organizations .
25 the gas fields sourced by coalification gases from the Carboniferous with reservoirs in the Upper Carboniferous , Permian and lower Triassic ( Bunter ) .
26 She 's very slim with curves in all the right places , but Dennis wanted her to be even thinner .
27 Not that he was so popular with crowds outside Norwich or other players .
28 This last wild exaggeration has also been popular with educators at times when they wanted to stress the importance of their task and the need to get it right .
29 Stroud , Gloucestershire-based Top Level Computing Ltd is offering MS-DOS and Windows users upgrades to its Complete Works or Fine Words packages , for £130 and £90 respectively : Complete Works combines a word processor , spreadsheet , database and charting with new form design and filling facilities ; the company reckons that the deal will be popular with users of its previous Microsoft Works package and with MS-DOS , Wordstar Express , Locoscript and Supercalc users wanting an upgrade path to Windows .
30 Although generally popular with members of the company , Crawford left Leo McKern with ‘ the remaining impression of a young man with an inflated self-opinion regarding his importance ’ , although McKern added , ‘ However , he was obviously quite correct in this regard . ’
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