Example sentences of "[noun] to go with the [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Er , a fourth year of record profits , record er , sales , record margin , with the schools business thirty seven percent ahead of the previous year with our successful maths programme , aided and abetted by er , the business that produces the manipulatives to go with the maths programme .
2 My little stand to go with the microphone , I had it here probably fallen in my handbag .
3 I know , but you could have a , yes but you could have a jumper to go with the trousers , lilac 's nice
4 Oh yeah , i in that way er certainly when he produced the bonus contract to go with the saw table , you know we w that was fairly plain , that production would have risen in his estimates quite considerably , and yet our wages in fact would have dropped quite considerably so , yes I mean er it did n't seem quite to tally in the way we would have like to have seen it .
5 The year the shop opened she hired a new dress designer , Jacqui Smale , fresh from the Royal College of Art , and told her how sensible she thought it was to wear uniform because this removed the agonies of planning what to wear each day as well as the decisions about accessories to go with the clothes .
6 I also like to make hats and accessories to go with the clothes .
7 She only had one cow , it was all she could afford , but it provided enough milk to go with the porridge in the morning and the potatoes at other meals .
8 If it 's just a cough to go with the cold then there 's nothing they can do anyway , but if it 's an asthmatic cough then I can give him some erm Ventolin .
9 ‘ Perhaps we could get some ivy to go with the holly , ’ suggested Mary .
10 During this establishing sequence the Grams Operator 's first duty is to fade up a track of Tristram Cary 's incidental mood effects to go with the establishing shots .
11 However Mr Garnett can also supply a hopper to go with the CTS for an extra £150 .
12 ‘ We could say Kylie 's just having fun , being a big kid , giving us a giggle ; but then the grown up Kylie goes and writes a caption to go with the picture , ’ began the psychologist 's summing up .
13 The reminiscing had begun and , although she paused briefly to hand round the plates and a bowl of crisp salad to go with the pie , there was no way Harry could stop her .
14 In other words , you 've got to have , shall we say , the equipment to go with the line .
15 The absence of trunks or limbs to go with the heads implies that they were mounted on clay or wooden bodies which have subsequently disintegrated , probably simple wooden xoana .
16 We began producing the big catalogues to go with the shows .
17 Culley imagined a suit to go with the voice — well-cut , expensive , unobtrusive .
18 I leaned back in my chair and took a slug to go with the belt I 'd just had .
19 She made Cumberland sauce to go with the turkey , translucent and clear wine-red in little pots , with fine gold strips of peel lying in it .
20 Richard and Peter acquired roles to match the sesterces , and names to go with the roles : Gaius Marcus Mollandius and Petronius Redburnus .
21 This political opposition involved no ecological critique of mining 's effects : instead it wanted more industrial development , smelters to go with the mines , and major state involvement , if not outright nationalization .
22 Since then we have been steadily searching for another prize to go with the vouchers .
23 I was told , back in those days , that he had built a working steam model of the locomotive to go with the coaches , but this must have left the district some years earlier , as my father never saw it , and never met John Griffiths , though he knew of Ernest from about 1910 , having started his articles in that office .
24 Yes , I think it 's totally clear that what we need is a short message , and it 's a white paper , and therefore it 's inviting a message , so what we really need is a short message to go with the A B C and the government act on the two S P's and I would give an undertaking at this point that it will go under the chief environmental health officers ' name .
25 Especially the Royal Academy , he wrote , with its Presidents and its private views and its Signed Goblets and its Concerts of Spanish music to go with the Murillo exhibition and its Concerts of Russian music to go with its Tatlin exhibition and its Concerts of Dutch music to go with its de Hooch exhibition , and its Silk-screened Scarves and its Special Offers and its Jigsaws of the Raft of Medusa and La Grande Jatte and its Good Taste and its Tondo and its Education Department and its Restaurant with its Tasty Snacks and its Cold Buffet and its Glass of Wine and its Napkins Designed by a Living Artist , and its Proximity to Cork Street , with its Galleries and their Private Views and their Favoured Clients and their Phone Calls to New York and their Summer Shows and their Autumn Shows and their Winter Shows and their Embossed Invitations and their Highly Polished Floors .
26 You should learn from this that it does not matter what side you choose for the base as long as you choose the correct Perpendicular height to go with the base .
27 And she told this maid to go with the letters to post them .
28 There were shaky cane chairs to go with the table , which I carried home on my head , and there Mum sat hour after hour , doing calligraphy — Christmas and birthday cards on squares of lush paper .
29 Tomorrow we have to get up at 6.30 ( on a Sunday ! ) in order to go with the participants on the course to a commune outside Nanking , to do our ‘ Open-door Schooling ’ — Open-door Schooling is an essential part of the Chinese political philosophy of education — i.e. educational institutions have to have an open door and renew their contacts with industry and agriculture .
30 Sinking into the pouch-seat , I was aware that I was getting a sever headache to go with the soreness of my face .
  Next page