Example sentences of "[to-vb] [prep] term with [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 They have had to come to terms with computer print-outs , data sheets , the use of electronic equipment , and biological sampling techniques .
2 It could be a rewarding form of teaching to help an uninformed but well-motivated student to come to terms with poetry , but it would involve time and leisure .
3 It was originally designed by space scientists in America to help astronauts to come to terms with weightlessness .
4 Derek Jeffries was bought for Crystal Palace for £100,000 in September 1973 by Manager Malcolm Allison , who h , ad also been his boss at Manchester City , to help boost Palace 's struggling midfield as we sought desperately to come to terms with life after relegation to Division Two .
5 Throughout life , a capacity to play , to symbolize , and to have access to the world of fantasy can assist people to come to terms with life .
6 The troubled conscience , the tortured mind , compelling one to come to terms with life , made one impatient of the mere accumulation of facts .
7 Weaver and his colleagues ( 1985 ) found that residents most able to come to terms with admission were those who had exercised some degree of control or choice in entering residential care .
8 In the sonnets involving the Dark Lady , however , with their tortuous triangular structure , the reader does stand apart , watching the poet 's attempt to come to terms with deception and exclusion :
9 These psychological pathologies are attributed to failure to come to terms with impairment ( Lindowski and Dunn , 1974 ; Shindi , 1983 ) .
10 Now , slowly I began to come to terms with guilt .
11 He wrote to Stead in April 1928 that he felt that for reasons of compensation he required the most ascetic and violent form of discipline , and discussed having to come to terms with celibacy as a Christian .
12 Refusing to come to terms with reality harms us and , incidentally , deceives no one else for long .
13 ‘ Most people , in their hearts , know that Britain has to come to terms with reality .
14 It is never easy to come to terms with death — it brings with it a surfeit of emotions ; disbelief , anger , guilt , resentment and remorse .
15 ‘ How 's the lad ever going to come to terms with death the way you carry on ? ’
16 Here , Joanna , her mother and father John tell Penny Wark of their struggle to come to terms with tragedy .
17 Feelings and emotions are examined in depth , and it is then that pupils can be seen struggling to come to terms with right and wrong .
18 Rewording is a worthwhile exercise because it forces you to come to terms with language .
19 For most students they are centred in the need to come to terms with failure .
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