Example sentences of "with a " in BNC.

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1 In this way , with a little money but much commitment , a great deal can be done . ’
2 Kate has been overseeing an AIDS education course in Constanta together with a local representative , Ana Ureche .
3 While numbers of new AIDS cases reported officially each month have remained relatively steady , there has been a big increase in those needing expert medical and nursing advice at home with a 24-hour on call back up .
4 Sex with a condom that contains nonoxynol spermicide .
5 Injecting drugs with a shared needle and syringe. ( 20 people can get infected in a single evening this way . )
6 They can kill , and injecting drugs with a shared needle or syringe can be the fastest way to get HIV — even if you only do it once .
7 From lst October 1990 , there is also a new scheme called GIFT AID which allows you to give sums of £600 or more to a charity tax-effectively ( with a maximum of £5 million for your total charitable donations in any one tax year ) .
8 With a payment under covenant , The Deed of Covenant has to be filled in corrected before a payment is made .
9 However , we are able to enter the 1991/92 financial year with a firm financial base , a strong management team and a greater than ever determination to be an effective caring Christian response to this global epidemic wherever it is most needed .
10 This will be the first UN mechanism with a clear mandate to examine cases of detained prisoners of conscience anywhere in the world .
11 In November 1990 he had been arrested in connection with a protest by women in Riyadh against a ban on women drivers .
12 Santiago , Chile : On a warm autumn evening in 1990 international rock star Sting dances on stage with a group of Chilean mothers and grandmothers of the ‘ disappeared ’ .
13 The 1990s began with a dramatic upturn of the fortunes of thousands of prisoners of conscience across eastern and central Europe .
14 They had copied out the names and addresses of everyone who wrote to them and enclosed the list with a message of thanks and good wishes , asking that it be sent on .
15 ‘ Disappeared ’ with a colleague while
16 His note consisted of a few words , impersonal , noncommittal , on a tiny scrap of paper written with a burned matchstick .
17 Following his death in suspicious circumstances in 1972 , his widow and six children , together with a female cousin , ‘ disappeared ’ .
18 I have worked for 14 years as a care assistant in a special school , and although the general attitude towards individuals with a mental handicap is gradually changing , it is both reassuring and encouraging to see youngsters such as these becoming a more regular part of ‘ everyday life ’ .
19 Is the text or part of the text written so that a reader will benefit in a future encounter with a work of art ?
20 Things are not so simple , as some art historians write well about the present , with a generosity of feeling and approach enriching to contemporary culture .
21 Writing of many types may assist a reader who looks forward to an encounter with a work of art .
22 The stress of the book falls on a viewer 's encounter with a work of art , and how a prior reading of a piece of art criticism can improve that encounter .
23 This places a critic in a privileged position , but also with a responsibility to make clear whether views expressed are those of the critic or those of the artist .
24 ‘ Beneath a sultry sky , at four o'clock , the island , boats slipping past its flank , stirring with a casual Sunday crowd enjoying the fresh air among the trees ; and these forty or so figures are endowed with a succinct , hieratic line …
25 ‘ Beneath a sultry sky , at four o'clock , the island , boats slipping past its flank , stirring with a casual Sunday crowd enjoying the fresh air among the trees ; and these forty or so figures are endowed with a succinct , hieratic line …
26 It is relatively brief , as can be seen by comparing it with a more recent competitor for the same market , H. W. Janson 's A History of Art , which is more than twice the length and has more illustrations ( 928 in 1962 ) .
27 Coysevox 's bust of Lebrun repeats — again with a certain restraint — the general outlines of Bernini 's bust of Louis XIV .
28 The imperative for a writer of a chronological survey is that a defined period of time is covered ; this may be linked with a theme , such as the history of styles in Gombrich 's case , but it is unlikely to be linked solely with a spotlight on quality .
29 The imperative for a writer of a chronological survey is that a defined period of time is covered ; this may be linked with a theme , such as the history of styles in Gombrich 's case , but it is unlikely to be linked solely with a spotlight on quality .
30 A further , and rather extreme way of dealing with a chronological survey of art is to eliminate the artists .
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