Example sentences of "[coord] [verb] [prep] [noun] with " in BNC.

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1 Those who hold or have held a professorship in the British Isles are not eligible , and any publications cited or listed in connection with a previous successful candidature for an RSC award will not considered by the assessors .
2 They would go to one another 's flats , have supper in a bistro , go to a film , or sit at home with bowls of spaghetti , chatting and watching television .
3 William 's accession to the English throne marked a return to the attitude of hostility to France , and for almost all of the following 125 years England was either at war with France or preparing for war with France or recovering from war with France .
4 Resist the temptation to deposit money in currencies with a high interest rate , or borrow in currencies with a low interest rate , if there is no matching underlying cash flow in that currency .
5 Thus today I am equally at home with both metric systems , and can switch from ergs to joules , or dynes to newtons with ease .
6 Moreover , the lack of precision and the subtlety of the overall vision of the city development strategy , as Holford outlined , was not all that easy to articulate either , or to communicate to others with conviction ( Cherry and Penny , 1986 ) .
7 From the age of four years , a child can use a booster seat or cushion in conjunction with an adult seat belts .
8 Rhythmic patterns tend to be sober and square-cut , and that liking for the C mode — as such , e.g. in Clemens 's Missa Misericorde , s or transposed to F with a B flat key-signature — which we have already noticed in Josquin , becomes very pronounced .
9 ‘ All these customers were gained from , or won in competition with , Castrol , who have been in Czechoslovakia for 30 years , ’ says Pomfret with delight .
10 To touch a dead man or to come into contact with the blood of an injured person would make them unclean and mean that they could not carry out their duties .
11 In milder manifestations , counselling in its true sense may help the individual concerned either to overcome or to come to terms with the tendency .
12 The Sylvie he had failed to help or to come to terms with .
13 Each picture in the sequence showed the thematic person , animal or object in interaction with other people , animals and objects .
14 The same is true throughout the world of course : laws and regulations are made by men , and the fact that an aircraft was built or operated in compliance with those laws and regulations is , in itself , no guarantee that it will not come to grief .
15 13.2 Any notice or other communication given or made in accordance with this agreement shall be in writing and :
16 13.3 Any notice or other communication given or made in accordance with this agreement :
17 These will be sold or leased to trainers with living accommodation .
18 But if it were pigeon droppings then it would be a moot point as to whether merely to murmur condolences and hurry on or to set to work with a clean handkerchief .
19 As the fashionable trade came in so more thought had to be given to subject-matter and to technique and in America this meant that short films had to be replaced or shown in conjunction with multiple-reel films as already pioneered by European film-makers .
20 Point of view ( 00 … ) may either be added to the main number or used in conjunction with the colon to given an extended facet indicator .
21 A number of cases have dealt with the valuation of fittings attached to or used in connection with land , whether freehold or leasehold , and associated products and machinery , whether in farms , public houses or factories : see : ( 1 ) for a farming example , Leeds v Burrows ( 1810 ) 12 East 1 , where the value of the outgoing tenant 's hay and a " spike-roll " had to be assessed ; ( 2 ) for a public house , Smith v Peters ( 1875 ) 2O LR Eq 511 , where the household furniture , fixtures and other effects were to be valued ; and ( 3 ) for a factory , Jones ( M ) v Jones ( R R ) [ 1971 ] 1 WLR 840 , where there was a small company carrying on a family business of manufacturing and retailing woollen goods , and there needed to be a valuation of the premises and the machinery .
22 When we speak of freedom as something to be highly prized , we mean a positive power or capacity for doing or enjoying something worth doing , and that , too , something that we do or enjoy in common with others .
23 Consequently many students , by the final year in particular , felt that they had lost all hope of making sense of the subject or getting to grips with the work .
24 He had been debating whether to go down there or get in touch with the record office of the ATS when , returning one day from an unsuccessful interview for a job with a theatrical agent , he had happened to bump into Eleanor Fuller in Piccadilly .
25 Or get in touch with the Solicitor 's Family Law Association , , whose members are all experienced divorce lawyers .
26 And should I need you , can I find you or get in touch with you at Rhodri Parry 's house ? ’
27 Although the location of the nursery and release spots are kept strictly confidential , anyone finding abandoned badgers can contact the group via Mr Wood on Stokesley or get in touch with the police or RSPCA which approved the nursery .
28 If you would like further details , contact Sandra Jones , in Engineering and Applied Sciences at the University , or get in touch with me , and I will pass on your enquiry .
29 When I took it off afterwards , my hair was a mess , so I put on a turban or tied in back with a band , which is what I do every day .
30 In vitro experiments with isolated gall bladder strips showed a significant enhancement of the contractile response to cholecystokinin or bethanechol after preincubation with the NO synthase inhibitor .
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