Example sentences of "but with " in BNC.

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1 Over a year or two , therefore , we have shifted from a population of recently diagnosed AIDS patients , often reasonably well but with lives dominated by a threat of pneumonia , to a population surviving longer and developing a range of further complex problems of a chronic debilitating nature .
2 Theatres were closed during the Cromwellian period , but with the restoration of the monarchy in 1660 came Court comedy and the beginning of the ‘ comedy of manners ’ which has , in one way or another , been popular right up to the present day .
3 Obviously , sorting out the courses which are on offer can best be done by writing for the prospectus but with any application the question that will be of overriding importance is how you are going to finance your training .
4 But with thy brawls thou hast disturb 'd our sport .
5 The ball is not with the union or the performer but with those who fund the Arts .
6 I had already been part of the theatre working as an ASM at the Cambridge Arts Theatre , not with the University but with the
7 The retreat consisted , and still does , of anything from five to thirty days of spiritual exercises , usually in an atmosphere of silence and contemplation apart from listening to the preacher when there is one , but with additional features of both vocal and silent prayer .
8 Cold cold cold but with the impact of a hurricane .
9 This atmospheric Grade II building — dating from the late 17th century but with a primarily Georgian bar and substantial Victorian additions — is a prime tourist attraction .
10 But with central heating , it is now not always possible to provide an ideal plunging environment within the home .
11 And , of course , closely packed plants compete not only with the weeds but with each other .
12 Many modern machines are not fitted with a nose release hook for aerotowing , but with one designed to be suitable for both wire and aerotow launches .
13 Good careful jewellery — usually she sported a gold looped cameo at her throat , very conventional , but with the cream wisped relief of a voluptuous woman naked against the nipple-pink shell .
14 Jay liked her eyebrows , straight and black but with a decided curve at the end .
15 Some of the veterans were on the point of giving tongue but young Donald McCulloch was on his feet and moving into the middle of the ring , he was full of himself , sparkling with mischief but with an undertow of ardour .
16 ‘ Aye , but with luck we will do little there .
17 Sometimes they were a little lifeless , not with lethargy or simple weariness ( they could be that , but then his whole body-language ‘ drooped ’ accordingly ) , but with a specific withdrawn quality which , when taken with a certain passivity of the face , can be hard and unyielding : betokening a concern — even a resentment — in being examined in that particular way .
18 But with it all , an indomitable hope of the finest calibre .
19 Was Leonard aware , even at such a tender age , of the sense of grief his father had , not only in his life being shortened but with it his usefulness ?
20 Would it not make a difference if one identified experience , not with some disposition to overt behaviour , but with the ‘ behaviour ’ of the brain as it ‘ discriminates ’ the various sorts of stimuli within the nervous system ?
21 Here where the streets are not paved with gold , but with garbage .
22 But with a sliver of lemon ?
23 It has all the goodness of liver but with virtually all the moisture , fibre and fat taken out .
24 This tendency to catch and pull happens most often when approaching the workpiece , but with experience I found this can be avoided easily by working against the rotation .
25 This means that with wood veneer you can not achieve very fine lines in a design but with care and good planning some quite delicate effects can be obtained ( fig. 3 ) .
26 This usually consists of a simple coffin , no car , no flowers , no organ , but with a minister of religion present .
27 Radio signalling made more than a debut , helping toward the achievement of one of the decade 's miracles , not only the survival but with greater expectation of long life of much of the Highland lines and many more .
28 True also that property questions had already been separated off from the main business , to be handled by the British Rail Property Board ( also on a regional basis , but with somewhat different geographical areas from those used by the operating regions ) .
29 Only the Royal Scot remained as a viable Euston-Glasgow train but with a schedule fifteen minutes slower than the five-hour norm established in the 1974 timetable .
30 Nine Pullmans were restored to their former splendour ( but with modern air braking ) at Carnforth in a remarkable £3 million project .
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