Example sentences of "[to-vb] with [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Parents should realise that young people may use these terms to communicate with fellow users and hide their involvement with drugs , ’ said Mr Stockley , former head of the National Drugs Intelligence Unit .
2 A network is likely to include at least one printer and may be able to communicate with other networks or electronic devices located far away .
3 Brains evolved the capacity to communicate with other brains by means of language and cultural traditions .
4 Level 1 is the first of a graded series of modules which develop the student 's ability to use the target language to communicate with other speakers of that language .
5 David Gettings , manager of Binns , Darlington , has presented certificates to four of six members of staff who have successfully completed a sign language course to enable them to communicate with deaf customers .
6 These entities are placed on Earth to manage coincidences in such a way as to inch us gradually along the evolutionary path and , while on Ketamine , Lilly was able to communicate with these extraterrestrials , who informed him that they had removed DNA samples from Earth and transported them to another planet .
7 JAC claims jedi will soon be able to communicate with object-oriented databases via the generation of C++ code .
8 Also , enhanced TCP/IP software improves the ability of OpenVMS systems to communicate with Unix-based systems or any system running TCP/IP .
9 For student with a high intermediate to advanced level of proficiency in English whose occupational needs include ability to communicate with English-speaking members of the business community .
10 There are a number of modelling programs suitable for use on microcomputers at a price which is so low that a complete system often costs less than the terminals used merely to communicate with larger computers .
11 Still , those who manage Europe 's frequencies are trying to struggle with other problems .
12 Too old to struggle with such incongruities , many of his later designs , however neatly composed , lack the confident style of his work before 1850 .
13 The house in Broad Street was to be inundated in the years to come with hopeful contributions from naval captains , clergymen , convicts , sheep-farmers , and soldiers , as well as Gould 's own specially appointed collectors .
14 After the intensive twelve months support with the project , girls need somewhere to come with any problems that may occur later .
15 A tendency to editorialize seems to come with higher-lever Intelloids .
16 And , as soon as the consumer has to juggle with changes in the period of the agreement as well , he also has to juggle with some paradoxes .
17 With a parachute jump as the finale to the whole race , Fusil had ruled that each competitor be certified to jump with rectangular parachutes .
18 However the accountability aspect of the appraisal scheme had produced reluctance on the part of many teachers to grapple with controversial matters such as this in the self-appraisal and led teachers into producing reports for a public audience .
19 It was a strange moment , and I had to grapple with conflicting sensations .
20 However , these were frequently in technical language and sold in only a few outlets ; and many clergy were not concerned with encouraging the laity to grapple with complex issues .
21 It has only been in the last year or so that the Government has started to grapple with major areas of social policy like education and housing .
22 Young workers needed to develop the ‘ ability to grapple with unfamiliar conditions , and the habit of applying one 's mind and one 's knowledge to what one has to do ’ .
23 Almost from the outset , the measure provoked fierce ethical debate , and while the 12 nations of the European Community continued to grapple with commercial aspects of biotechnology , the 26-nation Council of Europe has been working toward an international convention on human rights questions in bioethics .
24 At worst , they merely signal a reluctance or inability to grapple with those problems .
25 The present reorganisation of the NHS , heralded by the White Paper Working for Patients in 1989 , marks another attempt to grapple with basic tensions which arise from its organisational form .
26 There have been four attempts to grapple with these tensions through restructuring or internal reorganisation .
27 This inherent resistance to change is exacerbated by the low priority accorded by our law schools to the teaching of comparative law and , in England , by an unwillingness to grapple with foreign languages , itself both a cause and a consequence of English becoming the new lingua franca .
28 Those who gossip about him tend to meet with nasty accidents . ’
29 Every three months she returned to Henley to meet with other students — some international — also doing the course .
30 Most would welcome it and would also appreciate an opportunity to meet with other trainers .
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