Example sentences of "[adv] with [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Laboratory rodents that spontaneously develop autoimmune type I diabetes did so at a much lower frequency when fed a synthetic chow free of cows ' milk protein , and recently a peptide antigen called p 69 was identified on rat insulinoma cells which cross reacts immunologically with a similar sequence present in bovine , but not human or rat , albumin . |
2 | I prefer crimson or deep orange rather than pillar-box red , as these colours show up better with a dark contrast colour and look more realistic . |
3 | Posters and prints fared slightly better with a Twentieth Century Fox film poster of The Blue Max movie reaching £50 , although an original of the famous Winston Churchill Let Us Go Forward Together poster only fetched £45 , instead of the £100–200 estimated . |
4 | What could work better with a free spirit than a stuffy , disapproving straight man ? |
5 | Brian Tustian , who has farmed organically for five years is looking forward to the opportunity of dealing with his customers personally : it gives him a chance to put the case for organic produce himself , and he can cope better with the variable quantity of his supplies at a market . |
6 | No pair coped better with the 38 degree heat or searing , unyielding surface than Jean de Saget and Cecile Pastre in their 2CV christened James Bond who established an early hold on the race they were not to relinquish . |
7 | He hypothesised that left handers who employed the upright posture ( indicative of contralateral cerebral lateralisation of language ) should perform better with the left hand than inverted sinistral writers . |
8 | We 'll get to know better with the local news after this |
9 | Whatever it is , it needs to have been thrashed out endlessly with the top leadership of the business and to be able to be expressed in a single , understandable , clear and unambiguous sentence . |
10 | Suddenly with a tremendous stroke an old man close by threw a tiny fish up in the air and down it fell . |
11 | She exhaled suddenly with a strained laugh . |
12 | Often found to be needed in vigorous , robust , healthy , rugged people and in children : they come down suddenly with a violent illness , a raging fever etc . |
13 | She fixed him suddenly with a beady stare from beneath the crêpy lids . |
14 | The significance of Hilda 's black clothes struck Clare suddenly with a little spasm of horror . |
15 | I went to the conference armed only with a general feeling of being pissed off that men seemed to have it all their own way . |
16 | The foreman of his jury wrote a letter to " The Times " : " Where a jury has to decide , as men and women of the world , " how much " " , the degree of uncertainty is so great that a random answer , consistent only with a total lack of any sort of yardstick , can be expected . |
17 | In the view of the British Treasury sterling convertibility , if accepted , would be feasible only with a floating pound . |
18 | After a little Pickerage calmed down , but only with a palpable effort . |
19 | The discussions dealt not only with a Soviet withdrawal but with the structure of the government to remain behind in Kabul . |
20 | Only with a Labour government can we ensure the N H S will be safe and secure . |
21 | The development of these skills has implications for teaching and learning strategies because only with a wide range of evidence can pupils gain adequate experience . |
22 | But the bulky fillings of ten years ago are now for the budget bags only with a new generation of low-bulk polyester waddings now available which turn in much better all-round performance than down . |
23 | ( 6 ) The reception of postmodernist culture is associated not only with a new type of habitus , but with a characteristically ‘ de-centred ’ habitus , in which classificatory schema can be loose and boundaries blurred . |
24 | It was appropriate that the BDA should go forth from the Bournemouth Congress , which set it on its modern course , not only with a new name and emblem but a new Patron . |
25 | Paul finds himself not only with a new pardon now he is united with Christ : but also with a new power . |
26 | Bryan Jennett , of Glasgow University 's department of neurosurgery , a specialist in brain injuries , said the advance of medical technology has meant that more and more patients can be kept alive but often only with a poor quality of life . |
27 | It has the advantage that the user is given a feeling of security by being concerned only with a limited range of immediate decisions . |
28 | But she replied only with a slight inclination , and then turned for Conchis to take off her wrap , which he placed over the back of his own chair . |
29 | It has been shown that somatostatin ha sno effect on haemostasis , and particularly on platelet aggregation , with clinical doses of 250 and 500 µg/h in non-diabetic subjects ; only with a higher dose ( 750 µg/h ) were circulating platelet aggregates detected . |
30 | It is because he is concerned only with a private set of notes that he is able to enrich his initial comments in this way . |