Example sentences of "[noun sg] he [verb] with the " in BNC.

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1 From his bedroom he communicated with the rest of the world through the power of the postage stamp .
2 It 's just that he seems so caring … in the work he does with the handicapped … ’
3 ‘ You know , ’ she said resentfully , ‘ when Billy was inside he was sharing a landing with some very funny men , and one day he was telling them about that pub he bought with the cellars full of Château d'Yquem not showing off or nothing , just by way of general conversation , and they said , ‘ Nice , is it , with that stuff you lot eat ?
4 On record there is the prolonged correspondence he had with the Postmaster-General ( PMG ) from 1908 onwards .
5 During the war he served with the R.A.F. and before joining Douglas Reyburn he was involved with retail grocery business .
6 During the war he served with the Royal Navy Combined Operations in the Far East before working as an overseas executive for Fison 's .
7 ‘ Every day he works with the defence and makes sure everything is tight .
8 To complement this transformation he tinkered with the reform of society and institutions .
9 Thus , even if Franco did not have the explicit or active alliance he sought with the Allies , he had their acquiescence .
10 he used an illustration of the pig , you know you can polish the pig up , you can clean it , you can scrub it , you can oh de cologne it , you can do all sorts of things with it , you can tie a nice pink ribbon around it and you can put it in a palace , but it 's still a pig and it lives like a pig and you can cl and no matter how clean you 've made it , it 'll soon find some dirt to wallow in and the ribbon might make it look nice in the show ground but it does n't make any difference to its nature and so it is with us and so Jesus did n't start on the outside , but he starts at the inside he deals with the route of the problem , in One Corinthians chapter fifteen and in verse three it says for I deliver to you as a first importance , this is the basic thing , he says to them this was the first thing that I said to you because it was the most important that Christ died for our sins , according to the scripture , what ever else Christ gives to us , what ever else he does for us , what ever else the gospel produces , the basic , the most important , the fundamental thing is that Christ died for our sins .
11 With powerful leg strokes , moving just beneath the surface he closed with the raft , and got his hand on the rope grab handles .
12 Next the designer moves on to the exceptions , such as a and s , all the while bearing in mind the axis he established with the first letter he designed .
13 With rapture and relief he elides with the larger unit , the glowing mass .
14 The American conductor John Canarina also pointed out that in a performance he attended at Tanglewood in 1965 and in a recording he made with the Chicago Symphony , Munch made two cuts between figs. 110 and 128 ( in the Durand score ) .
15 As proof of his good faith he deposited with the business agents the sum of £1,000 pounds which he had in savings .
16 During these past ten years , he had learned a great deal about his stepfather 's business ; not only did he trudge the streets collecting money , which he then took to the bank after it had been religiously recounted by Luther , but he was the one who made all the entries into the ledgers ; he was the one who always met with accountants and reported back to his stepfather , who constantly grumbled that he was ‘ too ill and racked with pain' to weigh himself down with the burden of meetings and ridiculous men in ridiculous suits , with their ridiculous ideas that a man should always invest the money he earns with the sweat of his brow …
17 Some of these were too hard to be blown , in which case he cut with the point of a penknife or of a small knife adapted for the purpose , an oval-shaped piece of the shell out of the side , emptied the egg , and replaced the shell . ’
18 This week , Jefferson Morley , the Washington editor of the Nation , wrote in the New Republic about his experience , one night , of smoking a couple of $25 rocks of crack , an experience he justified with the following words : ‘ I would n't argue that you have to smoke crack to understand the war on drugs … ( nor ) that crack is n't hazardous or that anyone should try it .
19 Evidence of this is in the play he makes with the Virgilian aether and patet ( Aeneid 6 , 127 , 130 ) in the puzzling but impressive Canto 16 .
20 Ken played a role very similar to his Sergeant part , the snooty intellectual thrust into a society not of his choosing — this time the ward he shared with the likes of Kenneth Connor and Leslie Phillips .
21 The absence of joy in his religious life was only the inevitable effect of his conception of God 's method of saving man ; in parting with the Lutheran truth concerning justification he parted with the springs of gladness .
22 ‘ As we left the hospital he joked with the staff , saying , ‘ Do n't worry , I wo n't ever let her come back again . ’
23 Old he might be , but he sprang to meet whatever situation he encountered with the alacrity of a boy .
24 And in the same way he sprinkled with the blood both the tent and all the vessels used in worship .
25 He neatly propped a chair in front of the door and went back about his business , but awareness of him tingled all around Charity — awareness of the way he moved , with such effortless grace , of the way he looked with the wind ravaging his neat curls .
26 But for all Pétain 's coldness to his near-equals , the reputation he enjoyed with the poilus was legendary , and unique among French commanders .
27 The following year he continued with the building at Halling , adding to the hall a new Chapel , building on a chamber and dining room and also a high wall to enclose the court on the side towards the graveyard .
28 The final partition of the inheritance in 1474 also brought him Chesterfield and Scarsdale ( Derbs. ) and Bushey ( Herts. ) which in the following year he exchanged with the crown for more land in Yorkshire : a further piece of Cottingham ; the royal castle and lordship of Scarborough ; and land in Falsgrave , with the fee farm there .
29 The final partition of the inheritance in 1474 also brought him Chesterfield and Scarsdale ( Derbs. ) and Bushey ( Herts. ) which in the following year he exchanged with the crown for more land in Yorkshire : a further piece of Cottingham ; the royal castle and lordship of Scarborough ; and land in Falsgrave , with the fee farm there .
30 James Weenes , in a conversation he had with the wife of a London weaver in September 1690 , expressed his opinion that William was " a Dutch Dogg and an Usurper " , who " like a Villain came and took the Crowne from the head of his Father " , and also that " the nobility was a parcel of Rogues and all of them lived as high as Kings .
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