Example sentences of "[pers pn] [prep] [verb] with " in BNC.

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1 The little creep was trying to get his own back on me for sleeping with his wife . ’
2 People come up to them daily and thank them for helping with ‘ the best thing that 's happened to the valley in decades . ’
3 The old system gave tax breaks for saving with life assurance companies ; the new one gives them for saving with banks and building societies .
4 Many teachers feel that their training inadequately prepares them for dealing with behaviour problems in schools ( Mongon 1984 ) .
5 Well he said if he accuses me of fiddling with the telly I 'll punch his fucking
6 ‘ You , Fernando Serra , are either lying through your teeth , putting on a brave face or you have the same loose sort of arrangement with your mistress as you accused me of having with Steve . ’
7 So I 'm very grateful to you for sticking with us and getting away from your traditions for this half hour .
8 As always , I am grateful to you for helping with our recruitment leaflet , a copy of which I have enclosed .
9 Can I thank you for sharing with us the the example of the concentration , that you put so much in such a short time .
10 They said , ‘ We 're arresting you for loitering with the intent of prostitution . ’
11 Thank you for coming with me . ’
12 Thank you for waiting with them , Brown Owl .
13 I thought myself , there 's her mother wandering about , is she off galavanting with Dave , where the hell she gone .
14 But oh , no , Hugh sweet-talked you into working with him .
15 But they 're really trying to trick you into parting with something at well below its true value .
16 This explanation is then offered to others with the intention of getting them to agree that circumstances conspired to prevent you from performing with the excellence and flair that you would , in the normal course of events , have displayed .
17 But the most important thing is to learn to think in a new way — to use your right brain to assist you in dealing with subjects which may have seemed solely left-brained until now .
18 Having asked for very specific things and following the instructions your mentor gives you by speaking with your own voice , you will see the results .
19 ‘ My so-called father is blackmailing Ace Barton into marrying me , and me into agreeing with his disgusting plans ! ’
20 Crime they say does n't pay , well you may have your own views on that but certainly across the breadth of variety of criminal activity we might agree that crime almost always hurt someone , more or less , we have a system designed to cope with the effects of crime and to deter future criminals , but it does n't seem to be making crime a thing of the past , so how good are we at dealing with crime , tonight 's hundred women have a broad range of experience as victims , law women , perpetrators , police and others , we 'll be hearing their views on the system and how it might be changed and asking why are we all so fascinated by fictional crime from Cell Block H to Agatha Christie .
21 Anything you can suggest as a remedy to prevent me from parting with my few remaining strands of hair will be welcome .
22 Though these courts were in no sense treated as subordinate by the King 's Courts , the latter would issue prohibitions to prevent them from dealing with matters that did not concern them .
23 This is seen , for instance , in the denial to prostitutes of ‘ normal ’ family relations through the existence and increased harshness of the offence of living on the earnings of prostitution , which effectively stops them from living with a partner .
24 The report by the Conservative Family Campaign called for restrictions on AIDS sufferers and those carrying the HIV virus , including preventing them from working with food for the public .
25 For many individuals the experience is repeated several times a year , thereby constituting a serious infringement of their personal liberty , disrupting the lives of their families , often preventing them from complying with requirements for obtaining welfare benefits and effectively making them unemployable .
26 Encourage small businesses and the self-employed , and ensure a ‘ level playing field ’ for them in competing with their larger counterparts .
27 This tendency to dichotomize policemen against the social reformer even led the ex-police liberal John Alderson uncharacteristically to describe the historian E. P. Thompson as being ‘ an unfair critic of the police ’ ( Public Office , Granada TV , 20 June 1980 ) ; and this at a time when Thompson ( 1980 ) had just pointed out that most policemen are ‘ ordinary blokes , and no society could do without them in dealing with many of its sordid realities ’ .
28 This means that any secret profits made by them in dealing with the firm should be disclosed and accounted for .
29 Such a treaty would help reassure the Government of India that , within what is possible under the laws of the United Kingdom , we are anxious to co-operate with them in dealing with terrorism .
30 At other times it involves them in working with familiar phenomena .
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