Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] with [pers pn] a " in BNC.
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1 | I used to go along with him a lot of the time . ’ |
2 | And so she behind all the way but caught up with her a few metres |
3 | They caught up with him a mile or so away at the Plough Inn . |
4 | And you can the new v village can bring forward with it a park and ride initiative that will complement other such initiatives taking place around York . |
5 | Oh , so I 've got to put up with you a week longer than everyone else ? |
6 | I 've fiddled around with it a bit , put a Wilkinson bridge/tremolo on it and a Wilkinson nut . |
7 | And with us , she 's met loads of people and she goes out with them a lot through college so |
8 | Even so , PNP has clearly brought along with it a few entirely new initiatives . |
9 | He is full of life an has brought home with him a number of foreign servants so that my house seems to have been removed to Paris . |
10 | You 've got to keep up with it a bit but I think that all those at the same |
11 | Andrewes used to carry around with him a small manuscript book in which he found his refuge from the intrigues , the coarseness and the immorality of daily life at the Court of King James . |
12 | Humphrey Lyttelton recounts : ‘ We brought along with us a strong contingent from Camberwell Art School , and John Minton , now recognised as a distinguished painter , was among the most formidable and dangerous of the first school of dancers . ’ |
13 | The encounter had lasted no longer than one minute at the outside , yet she took away with her a vivid memory of that thin handsome face , with its grimly set lips and smouldering brown eyes . |
14 | Officers and officials returning to Britain after the American War of Independence took home with them a taste for madeira wine . |
15 | ‘ I went out with him a couple of times when I was at the Sorbonne . ’ |
16 | ‘ I went out with him a couple of times . |
17 | Was it , were you there when erm , Steve was saying that he would leave behind with me a recorder 's programme . |
18 | I 'd gone out with him a few times — pictures in Penzance , that sort of thing , and father being away … |
19 | In her mind she talked to him , telling him about her life , day-to-day things , carrying on with him a long intimate dialogue . |
20 | But I did get away with it a couple of times on this record . |
21 | But the AA thinks commuters might not get away with it a third time . |
22 | This feature , Safarimoja says , helps prevent theft : even wart-hogs find making off with it a challenge . |
23 | An and they ring up and they say they 've had a cold all week and they ca n't put up with it a minute longer |
24 | Yeah she walks up with her a lot do n't she ? |
25 | No wonder we carry about with us a sense of inescapable loss , a burden of original sin , and a propensity to wild , anguished violence . |
26 | No wonder we carry about with us a sense of inescapable loss , a burden of original sin , and a propensity to wild , anguished violence . |
27 | Are we no better than snails , to carry round with us a whole house of past circumstance ? ’ |
28 | She found that Margaret carried everywhere with her a writing pad and a felt-tipped pen . |
29 | Such a given behaviour ( innate is the conventional term , but I prefer to avoid it if possible , for it carries along with it a load of redundant ideological baggage ) ensures that appropriate responses are made to particular stimuli without the need for trial-and-error learning , but at the expense of limits to both the range and the flexibility of the response . |
30 | It was not seriously challenged until the late 1960s , when A. Wenner and others pointed out that von Frisch had not excluded the possibility that the returning , dancing bee brings back with it a smell that is specific to the locality where the food is . |