Example sentences of "[adv] [vb infin] to [noun] with " in BNC.

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1 What with some villains that will only go to houses with something like that , because they think , they see that you 've got something worth having .
2 However , the image of modern families as isolated and inward-looking does not only extend to relationships with kin .
3 The core of the difficulty faced by duty-based controls lies in the fact that ‘ profit maximisation ’ , even ignoring questions of time-scale , does not refer to behaviour with any definite , objectively identifiable , content .
4 In January 1931 he left the Shadow Cabinet on the issue and did not return to communion with the official Conservative leadership until after the outbreak of war in 1939 .
5 These results , therefore , may not apply to persons with community-acquired pneumonia who are managed as outpatients .
6 This analysis is confirmed by another fact which Mittwoch does not point out — the constraint she describes does not apply to subjects with indefinite reference , as can be seen from ( 82 ) , which is much better than ( 81 ) above : ( 82 ) A branch was heard to snap ,
7 Robert Carnwath feared that the Act was so confused that we could not go to court with a realistic chance of winning .
8 Edward did not go to school with other children .
9 He was not a very intelligent man ; intelligent men do not go to prison with such sad regularity .
10 A small number are able to manipulate the new situation because they are able to get credit , to establish good terms of trade with middlemen and to generally come to terms with the different conditions .
11 But he could not come to terms with the climate .
12 ‘ Part of the problem is that I can not come to terms with my image .
13 I really can not come to terms with the fact that I am … there 's lots of interesting work to do — there was in the job I did — and I want so much to identify with that rather than just sit back here and say ‘ I 'm a housewife and I 'm happy ’ … because I could n't be .
14 John of Anagni threatened to lay an interdict on France if Philip did not come to terms with Henry , but Philip was unmoved and observed that the legate 's money bags were obviously full of English silver .
15 For the moment , however , we should recognise that the concern to strengthen intra-party democracy through constitutional reforms designed to hold the Parliamentary Labour Party accountable to the rank and file may do little to ensure that any future Labour Government delivers of its manifesto ( and possibly socialist ) promises since these reforms do not come to terms with power , the state , and the market .
16 While encouraging westernized intelligentsias , he did not come to terms with their nationalisms , whether he was lecturing in South Africa ( 1949 ) , advising on local government in Tanganyika ( 1950 ) , observing the Seretse Khama [ q.v. ] affair in Bechuanaland ( 1951 ) , or surveying the possibilities for a Central African Federation ( 1952 ) .
17 They just can not come to terms with the death of the Lancashire coalfield .
18 But he simply does not come to grips with the genuine political and cultural difficulty of establishing effective institutions for research in applied sciences , such as agriculture and medicine , which can not be seeded entirely by individual commitment and talent .
19 Or maybe utterly sane , perhaps it was he who could not come to grips with the topsy-turvy world they all now lived in , Edward thought .
20 England did finally come to terms with their first-half lineout problems .
21 When they are included , it is usually for the frisson connected with them as omens of mortality and transience , as in the poetry of melancholy : Clarissa , for example , is frequently threatened by her family with imprisonment in the moated house of her Uncle Anthony , if she does not agree to marriage with the odious Mr Solmes .
22 He 'd gradually come to terms with the fairly obvious fact ( as most of his comrades already had ) that wartime associations were almost inevitably doomed to dissolution .
23 However , while the resolution of the immediate crises in the user 's life and the provision of a counselling service to help users think objectively about their position may provide the ‘ ideal conditions ’ for coming off , users must still come to terms with their addiction , their lifestyle and whether the alternatives on offer hold sufficient promise .
24 She thought that although she might one day be able to accept this stupid time hiccup , she would never ever come to terms with these brief glimpses into another world ; as though a door had opened and closed and that , for a moment , she had stood with one foot on either side of the threshold .
25 One died recently , but she could n't ever come to terms with the fact that her house had been burgled , and that the er , that some of her most valued contents had been taken .
26 You will both return to Paris with me . ’
27 ‘ You 'll probably go to bed with an ache somewhere else if all my plans come to fruition , ’ she told him insolently .
28 And friendship with one generation does n't automatically lead to friendship with the next , ’ she pointed out with delicate sarcasm .
29 These two will now go to war with one another ’ .
30 ‘ I 've never been into that ‘ I wandered lonely as a cloud ’ type poetry , could n't really get to grips with it .
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