Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] with [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Seventeen trains a day , mostly filled with such meat , left Birkenhead Station . |
2 | There is nothing more depressing than a collection of so-called first editions and rare items displaying faded spines , mull bursting through cracked hinges , scarred leather inadequately treated with greasy polish , mending tape of various hues round the spine , head and tail bands hanging forlornly and , perhaps worst of all , a badly lettered brown paper cover holding the whole thing together . |
3 | National flags , where still seen , are rarely flown with any respect . |
4 | Another of the benefits of the travelling team system was the camaraderie that was built up between the players , all of whom were effectively competing with each other for Davis Cup recognition . |
5 | So , the final stage in Darwin 's argumentation concerns how a species meeting those three criteria would eventually arise with prolonged isolation and divergence . |
6 | A 48 year old man who developed submassive hepatic necrosis six weeks after beginning piroxicam but was successfully treated with orthotopic liver transplantation is also reported . |
7 | I have known it to be successfully treated with black sulphur powder mixed with water but prevention is better than cure . |
8 | One patient experienced a bleeding episode associated with a treatment induced ulcer 10 days after the initial treatment , which was successfully treated with another injection . |
9 | Then , prior to roasting , they 're lavishly glazed with pure honey . |
10 | ‘ Indeed , ’ said Mrs Mac Donald , delicately checking with one finger that her hat was still on straight . |
11 | Nevertheless , there were a few Conservative politicians who fundamentally disagreed with Conservative policy . |
12 | It is an important innovation in Hungarian law that a one-man company may be created , and according to the ministerial reasons it was introduced in order to allow the foundation of one-man companies by state enterprises so that they might have the advantage of carrying on trading with limited liability . |
13 | Most Englishmen I know , no one would sleep with , they presumably sleep with each other . |
14 | At first the track was more widely spaced with ornamental centre poles , but in 1927 — at the request of Fleetwood — side poles and span wires were substituted and the track re-positioned centrally . |
15 | I was suddenly filled with great anger and , without thinking , I turned round and delivered the most beautiful right hook to his jaw as he stood there grinning . |
16 | Inside , she was suddenly filled with helpless frustration . |
17 | The room was sparsely filled with ugly furniture , a horsehair sofa , and an aspidistra which sat in pride in its brass pot on a green chenille tablecloth . |
18 | It is recommended that your database is large enough to cope with current LIFESPAN data plus an allocation for future data . |
19 | The bandwidth of such a system is wide enough to cope with high-definition television which requires around 30 MHz , instead of 8 MHz , per channel . |
20 | He loosened his gold tie and then the pale cream collar of his shirt in a gesture so filled with sexual imagery that she found a disturbing warmth flowing through her insides . |
21 | It seemed inconceivable that the man who had teased her so unforgivably in the morning had been so filled with compassionate understanding later in the same day . |
22 | The only natural light came from an extremely tiny oblong of glass in the roof , but this was so filmy , and so splattered with accumulated bird lime , that it let in the flimsiest of light . |
23 | ‘ The only natural light came from an extremely tiny oblong of glass in the roof , but this was so filthy , and so splattered with accumulated bird lime , that it let in the flimsiest of light . |
24 | Years before , he had suddenly exclaimed with bitter irony , ‘ You are quite the plush gentleman and I am the black sheep . ’ |
25 | Some older people feel that they could manage at home if there were someone else living in their home , perhaps helping with light care tasks , or just ‘ keeping a watchful eye ’ . |
26 | Seven Types of Ambiguity , on the other hand , is entirely occupied with this sort of explanation , through the ‘ verbal analysis ’ of ambiguity in poetry , ambiguity being defined ( in the second edition ) as ‘ any verbal nuance , however slight , which gives room for alternative reactions to the same piece of language ’ ( Empson 1965 : 1 ) . |
27 | sliced raw mushroom dipped in lemon juice and a slice of lean ham ; or a slice of lean ham , chopped and mixed with 2 tablespoons plain virtually fat-free fromage frais and 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard , on a bed of shredded red cabbage ; or diced cooked chicken breast , diced red or green pepper , a chopped pineapple ring , 1 teaspoon tomato purée ; all mixed with enough plain virtually fat-free yoghurt to moisten ; or bread spread with tomato purée topped with shredded lettuce and lean , grilled back bacon — visible fat removed . |
28 | But you can make it different , George , if you 'll only cooperate with this television thing . |
29 | The long running saga over the Lurcher 's Gully ski development showed just how hard the developers will try and push into even the most sensitive areas — a battle that was only won with massive support and a sympathetic word in the ear of then Scottish Secretary Malcolm Rifkind . |
30 | Tile designs alter with changing fashions in interior design , and current demand seems to be mainly for large areas of neutral or small-patterned tiles , perhaps interspersed with individual motif tiles on a matching background . |