Example sentences of "[vb -s] [pers pn] with the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 This section looks briefly at some of the basic ideas and illustrates them with the results of some laboratory experiments .
2 I mean she loves it with the kids
3 It presumes the existence of at least two parties , one who allocates responsibility and one who accepts it with the undertaking to report upon the manner in which responsibility has been discharged .
4 Sustainable development consoles us with the idea that we can go on having more provided we are more hygienic and respect nature .
5 Generally this state is to do with basic physical facts surrounding women 's ability to give birth , which equates them with the animal side of Man 's state ; or with Nature rather than Culture .
6 Twitbread News further regales me with the information that McCartney was voted Scouseperson of the Year by ‘ the people of his home city ’ .
7 Appropriately enough for this stage of development , where the light is identified as a separate source , he equates it with the lamp in the myth of Psyche and Eros .
8 Once the replacement arrives , the customer puts the non-working product into the post-paid replacement box , seals it with the tape provided by Hewlett-Packard and sends it back to the company .
9 He handles it with the familiarity of a mother with her baby , yet he has a look in his eyes as if he was removing specks of vomit .
10 In the flickering firelight Kalchu beseeched him , ‘ Lord , you are the one who , when we have nothing , feeds us with water and clothes us with the wind .
11 Or control might be exercised in the interests of defendants , seeking to ensure that if they are to be proceeded against abroad information reaches them with the speed and security which the use of official channels is supposed ( probably quite unrealistically ) to guarantee .
12 A single deep channel links the Eurasian basin with the submarine Greenland Basin east of Greenland ; a shallower channel links it with the Baffin Basin west of Greenland .
13 ‘ It 's not every day that someone wanders on to my property and , when charged at by a Dobermann who 'd shot off as I closed the door after us , goes blithely forward and greets it with the words , ‘ Hello , darling ’ , ’ he replied , reminding her , had she forgotten , that , the dog never far from his control outside of the house , he had soon been on the spot to witness events .
14 He gives the obvious explanation that Shakespeare has read Ovid on Salmacis , and spices it with the assurance that Adonis stands for the Earl of Southampton , whom he keeps calling Wriothesley .
15 She also cuts it with the kitchen scissors !
16 Recent newspaper reports have highlighted the potential threat to Britain when the Channel Tunnel links us with the Continent .
17 THE publisher 's comment on this book compares it with The Organisation Man and Future Shock , claiming that once in a while a book so accurately captures ‘ … the essence of its time that it becomes the spokesman for that decade ’ .
18 Mandelbrot compares it with the phenomenon of scaling noises .
19 When the latest invoices are recorded , Caterdata looks at various sections of its filing system and updates them with the information .
20 If one then takes away the element of his ability to earn his living by the use of his skill and knowledge and supplants it with the notion of the employee selling that skill and knowledge as some commodity to a competitor of his former employer does that significantly change the situation ?
21 The wording of the Chronicle implies that the same force returned in mid-1006 , and Swegen may have accompanied it and remained until the payment of tribute in 1007 ; the twelfth-century chronicler Henry of Huntingdon associates him with the ravaging at this time .
22 However , he begins , after a fashion that is less rare with him than is commonly supposed , by apologizing for the impressionism that supplies him with the terms he needs :
23 Giselle discovers Albrecht 's deceit when Bathilde confronts her with the fact that the Count Albrecht is her fiancé .
24 It is only later when Bathilde confronts her with the news that Albrecht is her fiancé that Giselle realises the truth and loses her reason .
25 She describes her readers ' profession as ‘ dynamic and exciting ’ , all of which presents her with the problem of writing content erudite yet lively , weighty but not pompous .
26 He or she invents a product which consumers did n't know they wanted until it is made available , manufactures it with the assistance of purveyors of risk capital known as publishers , and sells it in competition with makers of marginally differentiated products of the same kind .
27 Then it means that a person , as the result of observing that whenever , say , a table is hit , he suffers pain , when now he is in pain , automatically associates it with the table .
28 A presence that disturbs me with the joy
29 Dostoevsky 's notebook word ‘ tone ’ amounts to more than dust and mortar and summer smells ; it catches up human beings and entangles them with the city .
30 It catches you with the boathook and wo n't let go , seeping its salty tentacles into your very bones .
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