Example sentences of "[vb mod] [verb] [adv prt] with [adj] " in BNC.

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1 If this happens the scab may bounce about with great speed and energy within the turret and may do as much damage as if the shell had actually penetrated .
2 WORLD-BEATING Merseyside high jumper Steve Smith leapt into a war of words with chief coach Frank Dick after learning he must jump off with rival Dalton Grant for a place in the British European Cup team .
3 ‘ But first I must catch up with Posh Porky as I do n't ‘ ave much capital left of my own . ’
4 So we can put some limits on the project : the chairs must be upholstered ; modern in the simplicity of their lines but not ‘ Cubist ’ for want of a better term ; easy on the eye and bottom ; they should fit in with other existing furniture ; and naturally should be of strong construction so that they will be heirloom quality .
5 Day care should be viewed as only part of a strategy and should link in with other locally based resources .
6 At the summit meeting last month between Bill Clinton and Japan 's prime minister , Kiichi Miyazawa , America insisted that Japan should come up with specific measures that would enable it to meet new import targets .
7 THE ENVIRONMENT Secretary , Mr Chris Patten , yesterday finally rejected plans to build a new town of 4,800 homes at Foxley Wood , Hampshire , saying the county council should come up with fresh county-wide plans .
8 I really must get on with other things . ’
9 The days are long gone when drinkers should put up with warm and often out-of-condition beer .
10 Repairs and maintenance No one should put up with unrepaired property .
11 For the planners ' part , they know that they must come up with good results to make up for the inadequacies of the previous strategies .
12 Mental-health promotion programmes in the Third World must start off with clear aims before seeking help and advice from Western countries .
13 Tomorrow should brighten up with sunny intervals and the outlook for Friday is mainly dry with sunny spells .
14 we 'll finish up with right angles first .
15 Is it not an attack upon the integrity of a man to alienate him from those actions which spring from his deep convictions in order that he might fit in with utilitarian calculations ?
16 So it 'll end up with cosy chats in the Beak 's office .
17 Anyway , with the topsy-turvy results this season has thrown up , it 's anybody 's guess what we 'll end up with after Man U v Forest has run its course on The Match on Sunday ( ITV , 3.25pm ) .
18 We 'll go on with routine procedure for now . ’
19 If I could get a home where my kids could grow up with daily fear and where I could also help my father , I could push this hell out of my mind and start afresh with my family .
20 Eventually the committee agreed to defer a decision to see if the school could team up with neighbouring villages to boost numbers .
21 Whenever I felt low , you 'd go down with ear-ache or you 'd trip over the back step and gash your knee .
22 You could end up with brown patches that wo n't go away .
23 But because such funds ca n't be used for staff , education officials fear we could end up with smart new buildings and no teachers to put in them .
24 And if he could put up with humourless Hugh for three weeks in the sun , the family , who could n't have many jokes to look forward to , would be glad of a running commentary on their holiday by the well-known author of ‘ Jottings ’ .
25 Product development departments could come up with fluorescent wolf-repellent bum-bags for £80 , and high-tech one-size bear-survival suits , built to withstand the claws of an angry grizzly for up to three minutes , and available in a range of attractive designer colours for only £350 .
26 It was only a theory but it had always amazed him , and the other field operatives , how Philpott could come up with solid cover stories at such short notice .
27 The action could not prejudice the specific property for which the receiver was responsible , so Sir Nicolas Browne-Wilkinson V-C was willing to wait and see if Tudor Grange could come up with suitable indemnities .
28 ‘ Then you could get on with real issues such as a transport policy instead of a scheme to privatise it .
29 You 'd start off with parliamentary business then have a review of foreign affairs , and very important departmental things may often have to be shoved out of the way to another Cabinet .
30 They used to come round with cheap stuff , getting rid of their rubbish .
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