Example sentences of "[conj] [vb base] [adv prt] with [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Fix the doctor or nurse up with white coats , stethoscope and little lights of the kind used for looking in ears . |
2 | Maybe she 'd win the pools or walk off with first prize in the national lottery ! |
3 | She had strong hands , and the pressure she put into her grasp felt as if she was about to throw him over her shoulder or come out with some menacingly appropriate comment . |
4 | I work with a lot of different people we 've all got individual jobs that tie up with each other 's jobs |
5 | Of all the shapes my favourite is penne — medium-sized tubes of pasta that fill up with large amounts of sauce . |
6 | It was nothing to him , of course — orders were orders — yet it had occurred to him several times that it would have been far simpler to evacuate the Shepherds than go through with all this nonsense . |
7 | With Pamela it was always the same — do n't worry , we do n't need it , the bills are all covered , I can take care of everything — but Josie would rather have packed her bags and moved out than go along with such a line . |
8 | No it 's , you know , you know s Sara and Elsa 's boyfriends , the ones that go out with each other every single day changing boyfriends |
9 | Everyone worked with a will to equip the expedition and load up with enough food , petrol , water and ammunition for three to four weeks in the field . |
10 | If a further trigger is required , do a large water change ( 40 per cent ) and top up with cold , simulating the rainy season . |
11 | You might well rant and rage , and lash about with all the fury of a gathering storm , but underneath there are different vibes , making a commotion totally their own , are n't there ? |
12 | Every year , travellers from all over the country decend on this small Cotswold town to buy and sell horses and catch up with old friends . |
13 | Every year , travellers from all over the country decend on this small Cotswold town to buy and sell horses and catch up with old friends . |
14 | Some of them may well have been to boys ' boarding schools and put up with this sort of behaviour |
15 | They was made that two men had to lift 'em , so there was hardly likely that any thief was gon na get in there and run off with one of these boxes cos you 'd never lift it . |
16 | To pursue one aim , such as employment , in isolation from the others , such as the ability to travel to and from work and get on with other people , is ineffective . |
17 | ‘ Let's stop batting one another around the head and get on with good government , ’ he said . |
18 | Now , all we can do is wait for his report and get on with more work . ’ |
19 | This is a very frustrating approach , however , and you will be constantly tempted to turn the model round and get on with some real flying . |
20 | She would just have to forget about Paris and Oxford for the rest of the day and get on with some work . |
21 | Apply to face and neck , leave on for 10–15 minutes and rinse off with cool water . |
22 | Before this happens to you again , resolve to spring clean your storecupboard and stock up with non-perishable , versatile ingredients which will enable you to create impromptu meals without having to drive miles to the late-night grocers . |
23 | Between us we harness two teams and go out with one of us sitting in a sledge driven by Tove , one on the back of Odd-Knut 's Sno-Go snow scooter , and the other tentatively riding the second sledge . |
24 | Claimed to offer car levels of style , safety and comfort along with cross-county capability , the Maverick is set to claim a share of the growing leisure vehicle market . |
25 | If most of the plants have finished , discard them and plant up with spring-flowering bulbs or winter-interest dwarf shrubs . |
26 | Otherwise , you could find that you get the piles of pressed material confused , and end up with two pictures that are very similar rather than two individual designs . |
27 | That was the great virtue of boozing , to go into a pub by yourself and end up with fifteen mates just for the night . |
28 | We make stupid mistakes and end up with rotten little capers like this one . |
29 | In Raymond Aron 's words , ‘ The essence of capitalist exchange is to proceed from money to money by way of commodity and end up with more money than one had at the outset ’ . |
30 | Thoroughly dry the inside of the seams and paint over with automotive body and seam sealer ( available in litre tins ) followed by underseal . |