Example sentences of "[adv prt] [prep] [art] [noun] with " in BNC.
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1 | At Newlands , the way in which Australia compensated judiciously , changing the plays , ploughing on through the mud with high kicks , by forcing the lineout , by their discipline and tactics around the fringes , was an object lesson . |
2 | she says , I 'm on about the lady with the dark hair |
3 | You do n't know what goes on off the course with the other guys ; their mental work and physical training . |
4 | Press relations activities must go on during the exhibition with media who attend or may be interested . |
5 | He refuses to play for the moment , boldly pressing on where others tend to dwell ; yet , with those Philadelphians really turning it on for the composer with whom this orchestra is most indelibly associated , superbly captured in Decca sound of great sumptuousness and tonal allure ( even if not always ideally balanced ) , it all makes for compulsive listening . |
6 | Once more the search is on for the woman with the most beautiful hair — could it be you ? |
7 | Ten thousand couples joined in through a TVlink-up with five other countries . |
8 | I did go out with one of me mates once and he was going burgling and I needed to do one 'cos I had no money or nothing , strung out , and he went to the Old Hall Estate and broke into a house and I got in through the window with him and I just looked around and saw all these photographs of , y'know like , the family that lived there with the kids and that and I just got this horrible feeling , so I just got out the window and walked away , even though I was strung out and I did n't pick nothing up , I just left him to it ‘ cos , like , though all the burglaries I 'd done , they 'd all been shops . |
9 | A taxi had dropped him and his luggage at the main railway station , he had walked in through the entrance with a porter in attendance ; and that was that . |
10 | It 's not like us nipping down for a pint with the vicar ! ’ |
11 | They sat down for a meal with the missionaries , fully appreciating the significance of their actions . |
12 | Writer Brad Darrach , who had flown down for an interview with Hopper , described the scene that developed : ‘ By mid-afternoon , the games became serious . |
13 | Er they would n't go and sit down for the story with all the other children sit at , sat on my knee on the floor for a short while . |
14 | By then it was blowing a full gale from the west , the wind slamming down off the mountains with katabatic blasts that hammered the luminous white of the water with such fury that it splayed out like shot , a reminder that the heights west of the port were almost six hundred metres high , the first ski-run only eight kilometres away by car . |
15 | Account executives at the insurer , who monitor its agents , had Wright marked down as a man with constant cash flow problems — he was always hassling them for his commission . |
16 | I went in for a tackle with Brian Mooney and I came off worse because I broke my right leg . |
17 | Now Amiga owners are in for a treat with Mindscape 's home computer version of the Nintendo toads . |
18 | WHILE SNES players are in for a treat with Super Mario Kart , sadly the same can not be said for NES owners , with their Christmas Mario offering , Mario and Yoshi — a game which takes the form of a puzzle startlingly similar to the classic Tetris . |
19 | It was Terry Rickards saying that he would like to drop in for a chat with Mr Dalgliesh if it would n't be too much bother and would nine be convenient ? |
20 | PREMIER John Major dropped in for a chat with British troops in the Bosnian front line yesterday . |
21 | PREMIER John Major dropped in for a chat with British troops in the Bosnian front line yesterday . |
22 | A twenty year old man has been called in for a chat with an inspector . |
23 | They 'd laid in for a siege with dozens of eggs , cans of luncheon meat , and tea . |
24 | So I went in for a scholarship with the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts . |
25 | After that , it too was turned in for a Qualcast with loppy handles and collapsible wheels . |
26 | ( ii ) Pipette small groups of embryos ( 3–4 ) up and down through a micropipette with a bore slightly less than the diameter of the embryos . |
27 | You , you come down through a field with a lot of beasts in it ? |
28 | Lords at one end , a working class hero at the other , and in between an encounter with the history which linked and divided their fortunes — that , surely , is a walk with a theme to remember . |
29 | The cab swerved in towards the kerb with a squeal of brakes . |
30 | She was walking down towards the ferry with Mr Clark and found the way blocked by a stationary train of wagons . |