Example sentences of "[n mass] [to-vb] [adv prt] with " in BNC.

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1 The CTC cost £7.5m to set up with £5.5m coming direct from the Government .
2 ‘ Again , being something so totally new and different , it took a while for people to fall in with it , ’ Shaun explained , ‘ but we 've built up a very strong client base in Doncaster and the district .
3 We would also improve the opportunities for young people to go on with education and training to reach skill levels and qualifications which will match the best in Europe .
4 Working within an embassy office or the regional office of a multilateral bank it is not difficult for donors ' staff to come up with a list of potential projects which can be presented to a recipient country 's ministry of finance for discussion .
5 But in fact it enabled staff to come up with more appropriate answers to those problems , said Edwards .
6 It is essentially a problem-solving exercise in which there must be a close relationship between sales effort on the ground and the ability of the applications and research staff to come up with the answers , within the boundaries of what is commercially viable .
7 It 's nice of the Persil people to come up with a washing-up liquid .
8 The origins of this philosophy go back as far as 1970 when Shell and the Nature Conservancy first devised a competition aimed at encouraging young people to come up with ideas to conserve their local environment .
9 It 's a contract which the community is well aware of as the brewer has invited local people to come up with a name for the new pub .
10 And what you want , you want people to come up with as wild as ideas as possible .
11 Is not it time that Opposition Members realised that there is an absolute necessity for young people to grow up with respect for the law , property and persons ?
12 Some churches are closed against the will of local people to fit in with diocesan pastoral plans .
13 urge people to press on with the task in hand especially when they have second thoughts
14 Short-time work and temporary lay-off has affected a significant minority of those working in manufacturing industries , and this too could make it hard for people to keep up with credit payments .
15 He wanted people to get on with the urgent business of living the good life set out in the Eightfold Path , and not to waste time or energy in speculation and debate .
16 We should not just trust people to get on with the task of caring for vulnerable children .
17 Will she send out a message to those who oppose smoking and belong to the brigade who say , ’ Do as I say and as I instruct you , ’ to the effect that they should leave ordinary people to get on with the job of smoking and supporting the economy ?
18 That said , we never just leave people to get on with it .
19 Do you think there is an argument for finding natural teachers as opposed to set of people to get on with the job ?
20 That conclusion is supported by contemporary evidence from Qureshi and Simons 's ( 1987 ) study in Sheffield , which clearly indicates that it is rare for elderly people to move in with their children in order to be cared for .
21 Barbara Taylor Bradford Angel 1st June , £14.99 P.o.s. : illuminated display bins , posters , box books , author poster ; complete repackage of backlist paperbacks ; summer reading catalogues Author tour : bookshop signings Advertising : national press and women 's magazines Media coverage : features in press , TV and radio ; local media to tie in with author tour
22 They relied heavily on the readiness of the local aristocracy and gentry to go along with them .
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