Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] with [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ I wanted to write a thoughtful song about recent events , and it was important that I just did n't leap right in with an immediate gut reaction . ’ |
2 | His underwear will be perfectly all right in with the other clothes . |
3 | Are you all right with the new ball , because we are ’ . |
4 | She would periodically become possessed with rage , strip off much of her ceremonial clothing , and tear about the Rante beating anyone who would stand still long enough with a knobbly bamboo cane . |
5 | any way I got to the last one and it was two combinations combined together , so you 've got two separate combinations to do and then you 're to put those two together in with a different rule |
6 | The jump instructions ( b ) and ( c ) in Figure 3.11 contain an operation code field ( perhaps together with a subsidiary information field specifying the jump condition ) , and an operand field ( perhaps together with an addressing mode field ) to specify the location to which control is to be transferred if the condition is true ( that is , if the jump is successful ) . |
7 | This may sound complicated , but once Sigma has been identified it is easy to find again with binoculars , though much less so with the naked eye . |
8 | The fall , identified for so long with a sweet , sad nostalgia , a magnificence of gold and crimson under startling blue skies , became for us a nightmare . |
9 | Women 's magazines had a lot to answer for , thought Lydia , with their embroidered jumpers , their mackerel and mandarin oranges , their stories of the nurse who gets the surgeon , the typist who gets the boss , contrasting so starkly with the bewildered anguish manifested by their love-ruined readers on the letters page . |
10 | But perhaps not with the other groups there . |
11 | The Gyggle forearms were covered all over with a regular pattern of tight ginger curlicues of hair . |
12 | A nurse led Charlie through to a cubicle where an elderly man in a long white coat made him strip to the waist , cough , stick out his tongue and breathe heavily before prodding him all over with a cold rubber object . |
13 | Prick the log all over with a fine skewer and drizzle over the remaining Cointreau . |
14 | Sprinkle evenly over the top of the vegetables , drizzle all over with a little olive oil and bake for 15–20 minutes until crisp and lightly browned . |
15 | Turn the cake on to its long side and brush all over with the apricot glaze . |
16 | Brush all over with the remaining apricot glaze . |
17 | Secure the cakes together with a little apricot glaze and brush all over with the remaining glaze . |
18 | As you get used to the F-Plan method you will probably want to plan your own high-fibre meals and can do so easily with the caloric and fibre charts in the middle of the book . |
19 | Hal had sent a messenger only yesterday with a dutiful report on his fruitless sally into North Wales , and his orderly return . |
20 | If red meat is really what you want , you would be even better off with a well-trimmed steak . |
21 | YOUR children may be pestering you to give them a games system for Christmas but you may be better off with a real computer instead . |
22 | If your material consists of pure text ; a book or report , for example , then it is quite likely that you 'll be better off with a high-powered word processor such as Word 3 , MacAuthor or even a typesetting system like JustText , TeXtures or Page One . |
23 | Equally , from the tenant 's point of view the interest granted him under a tenancy at will is so precarious that he would almost always be better off with a fixed term to which the 1954 Act did not apply . |
24 | If , literally , all the time you can spare , is five minutes in the morning before you go to work , and a couple of hours in the evening when you come home , then you would probably be better off with a caged animal , such as a hamster or bird . |
25 | If the latter , we 're a lot better off with a restrained government than with a rampant one . |
26 | It is made worse still by those Tories who feel they would be better off with a different leader , though none say that publicly . |
27 | The snag is , scientists do not yet know whether patients taking the drug for a long time are better off with a little testosterone , or none . |
28 | Do n't you think you 'd be better off with a soft drink ? |
29 | He had the audacity to suggest , during the 1983 general election , that the government might be better off with a modest majority , than with the landslide that Labour 's internal troubles seemed likely to produce . |
30 | But she assures me that you are far better off with a lensless eye than with no eye at all . |