Example sentences of "[verb] do with [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | The best she can do is to try to secure it by non-military , legal means , and this she has done with a fair measure of success . |
2 | These are not , however , the same kind of truth ; for the first holds for all time and every place , whereas the second has to do with a specific event which as a matter of fact took place at a particular point in history . |
3 | The second reason has to do with a simple fact of communication . |
4 | As height is genetically determined , it is difficult to see what it has to do with an acquired goal of achievement , except where parents or teachers convince tall children that they are achievers . |
5 | ( This undoubtedly has to do with the resultative nature of the passive . ) |
6 | The first has to do with the individual animal 's past history . |
7 | Metaphor is not just a matter of semantic features — it has to do with the above large-scale schemas . |
8 | A third reason has to do with the non-experimental character of most social research . |
9 | ‘ Still another difficulty has to do with the specific words the counsellor uses . |
10 | The desire for natural religion reflected an awareness that religious faith has to do with the inner life of human beings , that it connects up with profound needs , drives and searchings at the core of our existence . |
11 | It has to do with the perfect fusion of many things : the refinement and effortless muscularity of the six-cylinder and V8 engines ; the harmonious balance of the springing and damping ; the flawless construction ; the quality of interior appointments ; the strength of the body shell ; the grace of the body line . |
12 | There is another potential drawback ; it has to do with the fluent child 's love of ( or abuse of ) debate . |
13 | This principle in Hinduism is called ‘ Pancha Bhootas ’ and has to do with the five states of creative substances and their relationship to the five sensory faculties . |
14 | Part of the reason they do so is cultural and has to do with the elective affinity of their habituses with postmodern culture . |
15 | The second kind has to do with the conceptual coherence of the theory that the empirical investigation is designed to support . |
16 | The story of temperature measurement has to do with the experimental determination of the quantitative laws of expansion as well as a greater theoretical understanding of heat and thermo- dynamics . |
17 | It has to do with the pervasive corruption in public life , now at last being revealed in Milan , which favours large , one-off projects over mere maintenance because they allow more opportunities for douceurs . |
18 | One of the interesting questions that can be asked about the curriculum has to do with the relative power and influence of these various actors in the planning process ; for example , in their study , Boys et al . |
19 | The lack of priority given to teaching singing to ordinands is explained by one respondent who wrote , ‘ Part of the problem with the teaching of singing has to do with the relative infrequency with which the Sunday Offices are now sung … |
20 | Stress has to do with the relative prominence of one or more syllables in a word , phrase or sentence , in comparison to other surrounding syllables . |
21 | Another reason has to do with the relative imprecision with which those theories that , arguably , are more susceptible to direct testing are couched . |
22 | This has to do with the relational quality of deixis . |
23 | Make do with a passionate summer and security will soon follows ! |
24 | Make do with the absolute minimum . |
25 | Why not leave slogging through all that real-time stuff to the critics , and just make do with the flashy emptiness of the trailer ? |
26 | i longed for my muse to appear and scatter the philistines with a wave of her magic wand , her third , all-seeing eye , but i made do with a scented geisha … |
27 | Sorry I 've spoilt your expectations … ’ his obsidian eyes darted over her flushed face , framed in its disarray of blonde hair ‘ … though maybe , ’ he paused significantly , ‘ maybe you 'll make do with a temporary substitute ? ’ |
28 | I 'd just as soon make do with a packed lunch . |
29 | It is the hardiest breed of all , able to be productive where other cattle could not even survive , and , like other hardy old breeds , it is long-lived and can make do with the poorest of grazing . |
30 | Expanded memory is much slower than Extended memory , so if it can make do with the latter ( and you do n't need Expanded memory for an old DOS program ) , delete it from your CONFIG.SYS . |