Example sentences of "[art] [noun pl] ['s] [noun sg] with " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Begonia leaf cuttings Take a leaf out of the experts ' book with our guide to increasing your stocks of foliage begonias . |
2 | The 6ft 10in Scott Paterson led the Riders ' scoring with 26 points . |
3 | You may wish to recreate realistically the feather and form you see before you or , as I do , enjoy the birds ' interaction with light , weather and locale . |
4 | All these are part of what might be termed the ‘ quality of life ’ and the prisoners ' preoccupation with this vital but ill-defined subject is shared by the Governor , Graham Gregory-Smith . |
5 | In the summer of 1943 , the commander passed on his desk work at COHQ to Surgeon-Commander Murray Levick RN , an authority on endurance who was able to make major improvements in the COPPists ' diet with more meat , fresh fruit , and other foods not readily available in the ration allowances for most units . |
6 | Speaking after the meeting to someone who did attend it , I was told that the arkies ' interference with the rally last year comprised bluff and empty threats ! |
7 | The students had called the authorities ' bluff with their protests and shown solidarity across the country . |
8 | STAN MARTIN is assistant general secretary of the Musicians ' Union with responsibility for the media . |
9 | And Richard Hannon saddled a similar number of horses — equivalent to eight runners every racing day — to take the trainers ' title with 147 winners netting £1.78 million in prize money . |
10 | Indeed , the publicity-shy Cheltenham handler is currently topping the trainers ' championship with £117,000 prize money won , a large chunk of which arrived when Tipping Tim and Llewellyn ran away with the Mackeson at Cheltenham ten days ago . |
11 | Thus , the protagonists ' encounter with a postman who is too drunk to articulate properly or to deliver his letters , which he keeps dropping in the street , is one of a series of symbolic episodes expressing the generalized breakdown of communication in a country that has lost all sense of social cohesion . |
12 | That night we stayed in the guards ' room with Mahmoud , but we had the feeling that other hostages were there , too . |
13 | He is also addressing the criticism that the Fonds régionaux d'art contemporain ( FRAC ) , funds to enable the regions to acquire contemporary works of art , represent more intervention of the centre by encouraging the funds ' association with local structures . |
14 | This area was selected for study because of the authors ' familiarity with it , the adequate rural-urban contrast and the availability of a suitable image . |
15 | Thus , on Sunday , I hooted in disbelief when A Year In Provence focused on the natives ' preoccupation with hunting a local , woodland fungus which sells for £100 a pound . |
16 | Gary Mercer and Hanley powered over for Leeds , but Aston restored the Eagles ' lead with a penalty . |
17 | Le Saux then threatened the visitors ' goal with a piercing run which Alan Harper ended with a cynical body check . |
18 | The Redskins ' link-up with the Socialist Workers ' Party is the most stringent and emphatic attempt to thrust pop into some sort of relation to the ‘ real ’ world . |
19 | Anyone with a slightly cynical bent would have initial difficulty being convinced by the Inspirals ' contentment with their shrunken market — as someone who last saw the Inspirals dwarfed by a wealth of pyrotechnics and gargantuan lighting at Reading , your correspondent can only assert the view that their new scaled-down persona does them more than a few favours . |
20 | In Donegal South-West in 1987 Fianna Fail with 58.2% of the first-preference votes won two of the three seats and Fine Gael with 29.8% won the other : fair enough , except that there could be no representation for the Workers ' Party with 8.0% . |
21 | The party 's general secretary , Achille Occhetto , acknowledged the failure of communist policies in 1989 , and said that the new name represented " the two great ideas that define the fundamental alliance of the forces of renovation in the world " , while its new emblem , an oak tree with the hammer and sickle reduced to a small detail beneath it , combined a representation of the history of the workers ' movement with " our duty to live in a relationship with nature " . |
22 | The salesperson 's voice may be competing for the buyers ' attention with the flashing lights and noise of the equipment . |
23 | The ‘ stade ’ is the fishermen 's beach with its colourful jumble of fishing boats ( or luggers ) pulled up onto the shingle awaiting the next tide . |
24 | But it is the lenders ' generosity with their funds during that era that has been partly blamed for the continuing rise in the number of arrears and repossession cases . |
25 | Many reasons have been given for its demise : the potential high cost of registry operations ' insurance , especially since the participants ' liability had not been established ; the unwillingness of commodity traders to record their transactions in a central registry subject to inspection by competitors and tax authorities ; the reticence by the ultimate buyers of spot crude oil to acquire bills of lading from an entity designed to service intermediaries and speculators ; and the banks ' discomfort with the exclusive control of the registry business by one of their competitors . |
26 | ( 2 ) As against a person dealing as consumer , liability in respect of the goods ' correspondence with description or sample , or their quality or fitness for any particular purpose , can not be excluded or restricted by reference to any such term . |
27 | There were parallel structures on the officers ' side with chief officers ' management teams consisting of the senior departmental heads . |
28 | The accountants ' contract with the parties was to assess damages claimed in the terms of reference . |
29 | The plays ' prominence with the public are assured because of a Shakespeare industry operating in theatres , in tourist boards , and because of the centrality of his work with school examining boards . |
30 | This is because it does not depend on the source from which the language as an object is drawn but on the learners ' engagement with it . |