Example sentences of "[noun sg] [to-vb] with [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 According to Regulation 8(2) of these regulations a driver has the overall responsibility to proceed with due regard to the safety of other users of the road subject to the direction of any police constable etc .
2 The main aim of their eight-week-long visit is to learn enough to set up a consultancy centre at the university as the Czechs , unused to the rising unemployment they now face , do not have the knowhow to cope with such upheaval .
3 An attempt by Dagenham shop stewards to win the approval of colleagues from other plants to a South-east weighting to cope with higher living costs in the area and ease problems over recruitment and retention was rejected .
4 As long ago as 1957 Chomsky pointed out the weaknesses of n-gram techniques to provide an English grammar based on their inability to cope with long distance dependencies .
5 ‘ Sure , we can adapt and get the ball forward quickly when needs be , but that 's all about having the variety to cope with any situation .
6 Naturally , we would be delighted to have the opportunity to work with Big Brother Inc .
7 Most rowing clubs do n't insist on immediate payment of an annual membership fe ( usually between £80 and £100 ) and should give you the opportunity to train with other club members before making a commitment .
8 To resolve the problem that most organisations have multiple networks that communicate using different network protocols , the multiprotocol networking software in Oracle7 is designed to enable any client computer to communicate with any server or group of server computers in the network , regardless of network protocol .
9 The intention is that the members of the household should have an opportunity to communicate with each other , to sense their unity as a family , and to enjoy time set aside from the normal rush of daily life .
10 Their intention to continue with this strategy remains .
11 Now the company is making more than 200,000 lollies a week and staff have been placed on overtime to cope with extra demand .
12 There are several methods of extending our rule to cope with this problem , all of which are essentially ways of considering programs restricted so that we only need worry about a finite set of values at a time .
13 If means of production remain in use for 20 years ( a reasonable figure ) then the scrapping of old ones releases some 5 per cent of the work force to work with new equipment every year .
14 Robert had to say it again before she heard him and looked across to the table where Aunt Tossie and Andrew were drinking and Lalage was jumping up and down , opening her mouth to catch with complete dexterity the pieces of biscuit that Dada , suddenly lively , was throwing into it .
15 We are also interested in what the priorities are now for demilitarisation and reconstruction , and I ask the Minister specifically to approach our American colleagues to ask them to convert the substantial military aid that has until now been given to El Salvador into civilian aid to help with that reconstruction .
16 The Government has announced tough new action to deal with illegal gypsy encampments .
17 He finds time to talk to her and tell her what 's going on so that she 's never at a loss to deal with any situation .
18 In other respects the book has changed little and there is no attempt to deal with organic synthesis in its own right .
19 In an attempt to deal with this issue , Goss ( 1953 ) introduced a control procedure in which subjects were simply allowed to observe the stimuli ( in one case being instructed to attend to them , in another given no special instructions ) during the first phase of training .
20 In an attempt to deal with this discrimination against public patients , the 1992–3 federal budget plan is introducing bonus payments to those states which increase the proportion of public patients treated .
21 My right hon. and learned Friend has said more than once , and I have repeated it , that it is the Government 's avowed intention to deal with that subject .
22 Commit yourself straight down the fall line to pick up enough momentum to turn with minimum effort and use a vigorous down — and up ( unweighting ) — motion to turn .
23 And there is no intention to dispense with this kind of service .
24 He thought briefly , and then , Hazlitt recalled , ‘ seemed to make up his mind to close with this proposal in the act of tying on one of his shoes ’ .
25 Colonel Gouraud was a social climber , who found the phonograph a perfect excuse to fraternize with high society in England ( 37 ) .
26 Any change in the vulnerable elderly person 's capacity to cope with daily living should be considered in relation to his/her place in the family network , and the capacity of that network to respond to the change .
27 ‘ We have the equipment to cope with these sort of things and there 's no mystique if you know what you 're doing , ’ said a spokesman .
28 Individuals downstream , on the other hand , have to acquire the flexibility to cope with unexpected change , being able to reach quick — but accurate — diagnoses and remedies .
29 It is not necessary to subscribe to human rights philosophy to agree with this conclusion .
30 Nevile Wallis in the Observer drew a parallel between Henry James 's labyrinthine style and the intricacies that result from an acute anxiety to communicate with delicate precision and Minton 's oils , crowded with ingenious patterning and curious detail .
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