Example sentences of "[pos pn] [noun] [to-vb] [adv prt] with " in BNC.

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1 And it ble sun bleaches my hair to start off with .
2 and erm , it is therefore in those circumstances foolhardy in my opinion to carry on with the British Assessment Programme at the present rate when the effects on our roads are likely to be so drastic
3 ‘ It 's the third stage of my life to get on with . ’
4 ‘ I would be the first person to tell my players to get on with the game because when you do n't do that , you are only upsetting your rhythm .
5 Inquisitive souls might wonder how I persuaded my publishers to go along with my plan .
6 It is a great misfortune for my book to come out with it ( though I am glad it was written before it ) : if it had only appeared with The Present and the Past .
7 But Croat and Slovene leaders have reiterated their willingness to sit down with the Serbs and others to work out how Yugoslavia could be turned into a body not unlike the European Community .
8 The thought kept her silent as she walked along beside him , forced to quicken her steps to keep up with his long-legged strides .
9 To develop a comprehensive management development programme to encourage members to spend time during their carrer to keep up with new ideas and trends .
10 Those who care for ‘ ordinary ’ old people learn much about the courage and competence which so many display ; they discover that it is their ordinariness which is remarkable — their determination to carry on with the daily business of life , often in the face of considerable difficulties .
11 They tend to rely on their parents to put up with the drudgery of queues and are only interested in capitalism and the rewards it can bring .
12 WOLVES paid a high price for their failure to come up with cash for David Kelly last season .
13 Many experts in the auction rooms make it their business to hang out with aristos waiting for the time Uncle Marmaduke 's Van Dyck has to bite the dust , so they are privy to the ‘ who 's just acquired a new mistress whose florist is Cartier ’ chatter .
14 In Les Patineurs and Les Rendezvous Ashton makes his dancers travel upwards as well in an effort to show off their abilities to keep up with the music and beat each other to the exit .
15 Richard and John barred any further advance by holding Châteauroux long enough to permit their father to come up with the main Angevin army and force Philip to raise the siege .
16 What prompted her father to go out with the hand-cart she did n't know , because underneath it all he was a proud man .
17 Women in this category nag their partners to get on with it ; men in this category get nagged .
18 We saw in Sweden they tried to modify their game to fit in with the Continental style and it did n't work .
19 European manufacturers are afraid of getting left behind if the emerging handheld personal communicators generate a sudden rush of consumer excitement , and rather than wait for their labs to come up with their own local products , are weighing putting their names on one of the American products and manufacturing it locally .
20 It was their duty to drive back with their hounds all deer which wandered out of the forest into their purlieus , and to present all offences against the venison , whether committed in the forest or in the purlieus , at the next attachment court or swanimote .
21 Although two years had passed since that nightmare day when Simon had crashed on the Grand Prix circuit in Australia , Ashley had always known that , sooner or later , it must be her destiny to meet up with the tall , broad-shouldered Portuguese again .
22 Parents can not expect their children to get on with each other but family life is very difficult if there is continuous bickering and jealousy between children .
23 Jason was jealous of her ability to come up with consistently good ideas and saw her as a threat to his career .
24 Her key asset is her ability to get on with everyone .
25 He concludes that the effectiveness of a given system should be based on its ability to fit in with the external systems making up its environment on the one hand , and , on the other hand , on its competence in allowing its own sub-systems to fit in with each other .
26 A giant Worm on Monument Hill ; a giant Worm somehow feeding off hatred and able to use its power to link up with the Glory 's computer and turn the car into its servant .
27 Then he pulled down the oven door , smelt the sweet , fatty smell of the meat and knew that it was probably this very fact that accounted for his decision to go through with the business .
28 The bigger man lengthened his stride to keep up with Richard 's dynamic pace down the red-carpeted palace corridor .
29 If Joshua 6 represents God as mixed up in humanity 's games of power and violence in a way that is denied by the Crucified God of the Gospels , 1 Samuel 4–6 , in both its tragedy and its comedy , would declare his refusal to play along with us on our terms , and his insistence on doing his own thing .
30 But Curtis in his eagerness to catch up with his man , had momentarily overlooked the fact that the Prophet had picked up Foster 's gun .
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