Example sentences of "[adj] with [art] [noun pl] of " in BNC.

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1 ‘ But we are not going to rush into anything and are quite willing to discuss this with the residents of Stoke Gardens . ’
2 You may want to discuss this with the home(s) of your choice .
3 Contrast this with the words of a House of Lords Select Committee considering exactly the same problem : ‘ because of the high proportion [ of homes with polluted tapwater ] and the long-standing nature of the problem , the Committee believe that the two years for compliance with the Directive is wholly unrealistic . ’
4 ‘ Quarterly or half-yearly , it is a good plan for the housekeeper to make an inventory of everything she has under her care , and compare this with the lists of a former period . ’
5 Nevertheless , out of 76 district planning authorities responding to the survey mentioned earlier , 30 of them granted planning permission for potential odour emitting uses subject to a condition relating to odour emission , being of the opinion that the imposition of conditions , including those relating to odour emission , were relevant to securing reasonable and proper planning objectives which complemented rather than conflicted with the responsibilities of the Director of Environmental Health in his dealing with public health matters under the public health legislation .
6 There was nothing wrong with the efforts of his men at the moment .
7 There 's nothing wrong with the terms of the agreement you signed .
8 And William began to run from the approaching cart , which was piled high with the bodies of the plague victims , and as he ran the streets became the familiar streets of his childhood and he knew that all the time he was running from the terrible cart he was getting closer and closer to the dark house by the railway embankment with its shuttered windows and its locked door , and that this was more terrible to him than anything in his history books .
9 The first really large wave of Jewish immigrants had been in 1881 with the pogroms of Alexander III in Russia .
10 In one of those little quirks so popular with the writers of Hollywood biopics , it is recorded that " the rate at which the apparatus was capable of working was discovered accidentally , in consequence of the breaking of a spring " .
11 The British soldiers , both the officers and the rank and file , seemed to be very popular with the inhabitants of Verona .
12 It is certainly amongst the oldest of the European herbs , and it was its very pungency that made it popular with the palates of our tougher ancestors .
13 Criticism of the kind which became popular with the pupils of I. A. Richards at Cambridge later in the century was absolutely unknown at Oxford .
14 The new beer , popular with the porters of Covent Garden was then known as Entire in that is was served from a single barrel .
15 They were less bothered with the ideals of planned , balanced communities than with social control .
16 Not unfamiliar with the habits of police forces both in East Africa and West London , she felt it was , on balance , unlikely .
17 2 With the fingertips of the leading hand curled around in readiness for a claw-like strike , the rear arm guards against any counter-attack .
18 In the event , the crossing of the very new with the very old has produced an entirely new race of roses that combine the softer colour and fragrance charms of the old with the advantages of the modern forms .
19 And what chance will peace have if the enraged victims see the criminals escaping scot-free with the spoils of their crimes ?
20 The spectator in movement will see one mass protrude over another with the changes of image accelerated for people passing in cars — a kind of reality fixed in a rapidly changing life .
21 Such phrases confuse the way in which coded information is transmitted from one generation to another with the regularities of a nervous system , which itself is the outcome of an ordered developmental process .
22 We can not have the lord of a place such as Ringill intriguing with the likes of Bragad . ’
23 The failures in the Lowe bearing support all exhibited evidence of overload and were fully consistent with the effects of excessive tension in the chain resulting from the chain having ridden on the peaks of the large sprocket teeth .
24 Thus in cases in which pigment is produced , the presence of the 3.4-kb transcript correlates completely with the presence of black pigment , consistent with the effects of p mutations on eumelanosomes , while having little or no effect on pheomelanosomes .
25 Policy issues are resolved in ways that are consistent with the preferences of the majority .
26 Both these formulations are consistent with the definitions of pragmatics as " meaning minus semantics " or as the contribution of context to language understanding .
27 To speak differently , if e had not occurred , then even if there had also occurred any change x logically consistent with the absences of e and of cc , and consistent with the absences of links between cc and e , it would also have been the case that cc did not occur .
28 To speak differently , if e had not occurred , then even if there had also occurred any change x logically consistent with the absences of e and of cc , and consistent with the absences of links between cc and e , it would also have been the case that cc did not occur .
29 … the Government intends to develop the structure of the management of the Prison Service progressively in a manner that is consistent with the principles of ‘ Next Steps ’ .
30 Article 1 of the Framework Regulation ( 2052/88 ) should stipulate that all Structural Fund operations must be consistent with the principles of sustainable development .
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