Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] to [noun] with " in BNC.
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1 | But then , encouraged by her parents , she slowly got to grips with her studies . |
2 | WHYTE Crucial clearances but rarely got to grips with Hateley or McCoist 6 |
3 | The hotel stands on the site of the home of General Hugh Mackay ( 1640–92 ) , who joined the English army in 1660 , serving in France and Holland , eventually returning to England with William of Orange , in the Revolution of 1688 . |
4 | ( c ) Under anti-discriminatory legislation The Sex Discrimination Acts 1976 and 1986 These apply to all partnerships irrespective of the number of partners ( before 1986 they only applied to partnerships with six or more partners ) . |
5 | Both of us need a few moments alone to come to terms with things . |
6 | There are elements of a vicious version of the hermeneutic circle involved : people do n't like poetry because they have n't read enough to come to terms with it , and they have n't read enough because they do n't like it . |
7 | By this time Steven was old enough to come to terms with the divorce , but Matthew still found it difficult . |
8 | But now , nearly thirty years later , when he thought he had long come to terms with the deed and his own reaction to it , memory had begun to stir again . |
9 | He was potentially a useful ally and one with whom Edward needed to keep on good terms , if only because of his claim to the French throne ; but he proved unreliable and the expedition to Normandy was aborted when he suddenly came to terms with John II . |
10 | Milk was only sold to families with children under two . |
11 | However , all businesses must always bear in mind that in Community law , privilege only attaches to communications with independent legal advisers and not with in-house Counsel . |
12 | It should be remembered that , unless it is extended by SFA , the foreign business carve-out only applies to business with customers in the UK if the overseas person exemption would have applied if the non-UK branch had been a separate person ; apart from checking that the activities concerned fall within the exemption , the SIB 's restrictions on cold calling , therefore , also have to be complied with . |
13 | What with some villains that will only go to houses with something like that , because they think , they see that you 've got something worth having . |
14 | ‘ She arrived about seven thirty and they had had time enough to get to grips with their subject matter already , by all accounts . ’ |
15 | Graduates not only contribute to industry with their knowledge and practical experience of current practice and methodologies , they bring new ideas to that industry . |
16 | However , the image of modern families as isolated and inward-looking does not only extend to relationships with kin . |
17 | This approximation obviously extends to problems with more than two variables provided the objective function and constraints are separable , that is , they are sums of functions of individual variables , for example , . |
18 | There are certain opportunities that only occur to organisations with the necessary technical competence , market position or trading relationships . |
19 | Being Ymor 's right-hand man was like being gently flogged to death with scented bootlaces . |
20 | Despite such claims , it is hard to avoid the conclusion that in both the USA and the UK , the audio-visual movement rarely came to grips with the need for an elaborated theory going beyond the use of audio-visual materials as decorative additions to the traditional lesson . |
21 | Another kind of formal connection in monologic discourse is very intimately related to dialogue with an imagined receiver . |
22 | If incorrectly fitted , it is soon ripped to bits with even gentle off roading . |
23 | He confessed that he had finally come to terms with the fact that he was a homosexual , after a lifetime of denying it to himself . |
24 | ‘ He has finally come to terms with being a United player . ’ |
25 | We in the law , like other denizens of these blessed isles , have perforce come to terms with the disagreeable factor of inflation . |
26 | A few works , such as Jesus the Magician and The Gnostic Gospels , have been widely reviewed , discussed and distributed , but their readership has been largely confined to people with a particular interest in their subject matter . |
27 | But since any arrangement would need the consent of Louis VII to be valid , he had somehow to come to terms with the French King — despite Toulouse , despite Auvergne , despite Becket . |
28 | Derek Jeffries was bought for Crystal Palace for £100,000 in September 1973 by Manager Malcolm Allison , who h , ad also been his boss at Manchester City , to help boost Palace 's struggling midfield as we sought desperately to come to terms with life after relegation to Division Two . |
29 | erm The Queen did n't arrive till 1643 , she 'd been in the Netherlands raising money for the war effort , very successfully , because she finally came to Oxford with 2,000 foot and 1,000 horsemen , and erm a hundred wagons full of equipment as well as cannons and so on . |
30 | When Michael saw the happy faces on Christmas Day , the food that seemed inexhaustible and the merriment his gifts had brought , he finally came to terms with himself . |