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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Or they , what kind of problems do , problems tend to come with from the flats ?
2 The fact that drivers — unlike , say , factory workers — have to work independently to some extent , so that their schedules can not be fixed in advance , is one reason why employment law is particularly hard to grapple with in the haulage industry .
3 He 's always fore he 's forever contrasting er these these er centres in Highfields with his village halls and er small village halls and that and that 's very , the very truth , I 'd like to refer him and he knows as well as I do that what he should really be comparing with are the youth and community provision across the county which is an enormous amount in excess of the amount we put into old people 's homes and as Mr so rightly said , they 're problems were gon na have to grapple with in the future and so you then look at what has been suggested , what has been proposed and the point that Professor made about the Labour party having to make it work , is because it is they and everybody knows it 's they have been five membering this thing all the way through .
4 This is an issue which Western Governments and unions are only really beginning to grapple with in the context of the Single European market , and for many that is where the debate will stay for some time .
5 A girl I used to work with at the Beechams did like really big burps .
6 We were particularly tempting targets and , bombarded with jeers and gallons of water , we finally fled the hamlet clutching our sopping equipment to our bosoms like hysterical mothers — little comforted by the thought that these were the spiritual mediators of the people we intended to sail with over the months ahead …
7 Furthermore , the individual speaker 's ability to carry out successful linguistic " acts of identity " is subject to a number of limitations : We can only behave according to the behavioural patterns of groups we find it desirable to identify with to the extent that : ( i ) we can identify the groups ( ii ) we have both adequate access to the groups and ability to analyse their behavioural patterns ( iii ) the motivation to join the groups is sufficiently powerful , and is either reinforced or reversed by feedback from the groups ( iv ) we have the ability to modify our behaviour ( Le Page and Tabouret-Keller 1985 : 182 )
8 Five of them I used to play with at the Trafford Metros in Manchester , so they 've got a very experienced team .
9 Reflecting in her vague kindly way that it was very nice for Jasper to have friends of his own age to play with in the holidays , a lot better than in the days when he had lived in that tower block in Walworth , she was still thinking along these lines as she entered the gateless gateway and found her eyes irresistibly turning upwards to the bell .
10 Take along some favourite toys or a book so that your child has something to play with in the waiting room .
11 As you can see from the photo , there 's little to fiddle with on the card — no jumpers to mess about with unless you really want to , because all IRQ and DMA settings are software configurable .
12 It would be like kicking her when she 's down — and I think she has enough to contend with at the moment . ’
13 Unfortunately , there are many methodological problems to contend with in the analysis of such documents .
14 But it was to Kirk Douglas 's detriment that he was considered by the director to be a temperamental actor whom he did n't want to have to cope with on the set .
15 This is the largest and most comprehensive of its kind and does address the very real problems people have to cope with in the event of a major disaster . ’
16 Not only did she have that reporter to cope with in the morning , but if those rumours about the Russians planning to dump some of their copper stocks on the London market were true … ?
17 Finally , the last consideration , again I believe that to be a location question which I propose to deal with under the heading two C.
18 Of course it is true that some children have specific needs which it would be inappropriate to attempt to deal with at the level of the curriculum as a whole .
19 Do n't let it come across like that , the temptation is to think that you 've got to have all this bit up here , now you do n't want this up here because it 's very difficult to cope with once you 've tied it round to get it round the elbow , you want the least amount that you can get , just cover the arm and then it makes it much easier to deal with at the end .
20 How many cases do you as one barrister have to deal with at the moment ?
21 V. GENT enlightens us on a few of the problems he 's had to deal with over the counter .
22 But whether reprocessing took place or not there would still be thousands of cubic metres of other wastes to deal with over the lifetime of the power station .
23 And he 'd got lots of famous mates that want to play on his records , and he picks up a Grammy and releases records on scrupulous labels , instead of the 30 or more indie horsefixers he 's had the misfortune to deal with over the years .
24 Both in Health and Education , the new Secretaries of State have the advantage that those they have to deal with on the shopfloor , so to speak , will know that the Government 's policies are now here to stay .
25 When it reported in April 1982 , the Club had other difficulties to deal with as the Secretary , Bob Hodson , the Professional , Ian Evans , and the Steward all resigned within a short period .
26 ‘ The MID 's wont be as easy to deal with as the DEEP 's . ’
27 The people she would have to deal with in the London offices , paved with razor wire , rose up before her grotesquely and she would pull the sheets over her head and moan : ‘ I do n't want to get up — ever again ! ’
28 But he clearly places Leonard within this group which , he held , ‘ grasps at a confusion of symbolic images , often a ragbag of classical mythology , in the effort to organise a chaos too large for them to deal with in the light of reason , ’ which in turn causes them to express ‘ a sardonic bitterness in their social criticism , a realism without any utopian idealism to support it . ’
29 But it is a pain that many families are having to live with as the number of those dying of AIDS increases .
30 I suppose we thought , to our shame , that commuter land would be hard to live with after the beauty and breadth of Bristol .
  Next page