Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] with a [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Secure the long bullrush leaves around the pond , sticking on with a little fondant .
2 It 's important to go somewhere with a good kindergarten where they can just be looked after or taught to ski .
3 2 The defender drives upward with a full knee spring out of the attacker 's reach .
4 Instead of towing amplified sweet nothings ahead of the school , they might do better to sit astern with a few well-chosen selections from The Osmonds ' Greatest Hits , or Singalongamax .
5 Kohl has decided to go on with a fast-breeder reactor in Kalkar on the Rhine , although development costs have quadrupled to 6–5 billion DM .
6 Basically , I just sit down with a little Pignose amp and a tape recorder and play all night . ’
7 From then on , every two years or so , they were to acquire more brothers and sisters : Elizabeth ; Mary , who died the year after her birth ; then Sarah or Susanna , baptised along with a new Mary in 1784 .
8 Is there a certain time when you always love to sit down with a relaxing drink and something to eat ?
9 ‘ You 've fallen in with a right bad pair there , chief .
10 When it begins to set , splash a little water on to it , and rub gently with a pointing trowel in a circular motion , to smooth flush , leaving little or no sanding .
11 It was the first time , too , that I 'd been in a classroom with girls , and I got in with a bad bunch of women .
12 Thus , if : attribute Al , = single boundary touching only with a second domain , and attribute A2 = solid in domain space .
13 Fine creases where the colour had flaked off the shoes were painted in with a rich reunite of permanent rose and white , whilst permanent rose was used alone for some minor details like the punchmarks on the orange strap loops and the stitching around the edges of the straps themselves .
14 It was in April of that year that F.W. Hardy , captain of Stockton Cycle Club , got together with a few others to complain that the Barnard Castle Meet was being dominated too much by clubs from Tyneside and suggested it was time for cycling clubs from the south of the region to break away .
15 ‘ But we did n't want to go in with a heavy commitment at first ; we took a PC and wrote our own very simple software to deal with incoming orders . ’
16 If your candidate is going to research the level of pollution in a local river , he does n't stand on the bridge and look ; he either wades in to feel for junk or he goes in with a professional diver to find it .
17 Seating ourselves on the trunk of an old ash-tree that stretched along the ground , Coleridge read aloud with a sonorous and musical voice , the ballad of Betty Foy .
18 The pH levels can be adjusted manually with a commercial adjuster .
19 But he could cash in with a lucrative return against the 24-year-old German early next year .
20 Sparse eyebrows can be filled in with a sharpened eye pencil , but soften with a brush afterwards so there is no hard line .
21 6/Highlights are masked out while areas are filled in with a thin wash .
22 The BM7 intervened swiftly with a lengthy editorial , bringing the profession out strongly against eugenics .
23 If the small company audit is abolished , the reason for being authorised will disappear along with a substantial part of their earning capacity which they do not believe they can recoup through selling other services .
24 Androgyny was expect to go along with a broad , flexible and effective repertoire of behaviours , and well-adjusted emotions .
25 It will be necessary to see how far it is possible to go along with a strict criterion-referenced system or what kind of compromises may be worked out if such a system has advantages of motivating pupils and aiding changes in curriculum .
26 The spiritual ( or is it the psychic ? ) intensity of their presence goes together with a marvellous air of freedom and delicacy .
27 The end of power-sharing had left a vacuum , which the constitutional convention had failed to fill , and Ulster staggered on with a vicious IRA campaign , tit-for-tat assassinations , unconvincing direct rule , and no obvious sense of direction .
28 For instance , judo flyweight Karen Briggs grappling on with a dislocated shoulder shoved back in its socket .
29 A few other media met the conditions of technology , but simply failed to catch on with a mass audience .
30 As the right hon. and learned Member for Surrey , East ( Sir G. Howe ) advised everyone in the Financial Times last week , ’ There is nothing to prevent a group of countries pressing on with a separate Treaty The fact is that we can not , even if we wished , stop the others going ahead . ’
  Next page