Example sentences of "[be] [vb pp] [to-vb] with [art] " in BNC.
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1 | The foundation document was to be altered to comply with the requirements of the act relating to the creation of a partnership proper by 31 December 1989 . |
2 | Unfortunately , it has no effect on the larval stage in the eggs and further applications may need to be given to cope with the larvae as they hatch . |
3 | National Government to be formed to deal with the present financial emergency . |
4 | Next a management strategy would be developed to deal with the accidents not covered by , or remedied in , the first stage . |
5 | These metal loops should be spaced to correspond with the curtain hooks on the heading ( fig. 42 ) . |
6 | Would your spending pattern have to be rearranged to cope with the increased mortgage ? |
7 | Companies which comply with BS7750 [ Environmental Management ] will be considered to comply with the regulation , subject to specific requirements . |
8 | It 's not they have not yet been developed to be wholly reliable , and there are problems to be solved to do with the fluctuation in the wind power , but I think perhaps some of those are exaggerated . |
9 | All new ‘ workstations ’ , ( defined as any furniture and equipment used by or in the presence of a user , together with the immediate environment in which the work is undertaken ) , have to comply with the regulations from January 1993 onwards , and all existing ‘ workstations ’ will have to be modified to comply with the Regulations by 31 December 1996 at the latest for less heavily-used stations . |
10 | It is not surprising that at independence most governments identified the international companies from the former colonial power as potential agents of neo-colonialism , who could not be trusted to operate with the interests of African countries at heart . |
11 | Further provisions ( which are discussed in detail in Chapter 8 ) will be included to deal with the financial consequences of a partner 's death in such a way as to quantify the deceased 's share in the business and also provide for its payment without the need for any forced sale of partnership property . |
12 | If there are no relatives or friends , staff should be organised to stay with the dying person . |
13 | To be truly effective a system needs to be designed to cope with a wide range of inputs . |
14 | Trying to get an edge — which will count for very little unless the price is right , the IBM Personal Computer Co says that all its new business-oriented personal computers will be designed to comply with the most comprehensive worldwide health , safety and ergonomic standards by year-end : the promise covers desktop and floor-standing units , displays and keyboards ; it claims it will also be the first computer manufacturer in the world to test these products for compliance with the International Standards Organisation Standard 9241 , which addresses the health , safety and comfort of display terminal users starting with premium PS/2s . |
15 | The Soviet authorities had no reason to take any interest in the fate of a handful of foreign invaders when over twenty million of their own people had been killed , while as for the Italians , it had suddenly become clear that they had in fact been anti-Fascists to a man all along and could hardly be expected to sympathize with the relatives of those few fanatics who had been rash enough to fight for the despised Duce . |
16 | Lady Merchiston 's situation , Theda recognised , was symptomatic of the whole , and she could appreciate that the Diggorys could scarcely be expected to cope with a task that would baffle an army of servants . |
17 | It follows that a particular score from an intelligence appraisal can be a useful cut-off point in that those who do not attain the cut-off should not be expected to cope with the demands of the particular task . |
18 | While Ross was fighting to save his business — rather like David against Goliath — he really could n't be expected to deal with the boringly mundane but nevertheless important work of running the apartment as efficiently as possible . |
19 | It now appears that , in addition to this , I will be expected to part with a further portion of my income as a graduate tax to pay for my education , the last three years of which I am spending in hospitals , not only studying , but assisting on a voluntary basis with essential clinical procedures and tests . |
20 | that the respondent has behaved in such a way that the applicant can not reasonably be expected to live with the respondent ; or |
21 | The petitioner still had to prove breakdown by demonstrating one ( or more ) of the following ‘ facts ’ : that the respondent had committed adultery ; that the respondent had behaved in such a way that the petitioner could not reasonably be expected to live with the respondent ; that the respondent had deserted the petitioner for a continuous period of at least two years ; that the parties had lived apart for a continuous period of at least two years and that the respondent consented to a decree being granted ; or that the parties had lived apart for a continuous period of at least five years . |
22 | That the respondent has behaved in such a way that the petitioner can not reasonably be expected to live with the respondent . |
23 | As we have already observed ( see ( 35 ) ) , the verb see , in its ordinary uses , can not be expected to occur with an adverbal adjective , but this does appear to be the interpretation needed for ( 41 ) which may be considered substandard but is apparently possible in current British English : ( 41 ) even if the scheme does fail , I 'll see you comfortable Much more often , the idiomaticity works the other way , so that a set of lexical items that could fit the structure of ( 21 ) , with appropriate values , seem to give unacceptable sentences , as in ( 42 ) : ( 42 ) Eva played her opponent exhausted Wendy wiped the floor moist |
24 | The character and value of the property , the suitable and natural mode of using it , the course of conduct which the proprietor might reasonably be expected to follow with a due regard to his own interests — all these things , greatly varying as they must , under various conditions , are to be taken into account in determining the sufficiency of possession . " |
25 | As I was unable to see how I could realistically expect students to take responsibility for classes after only six weeks in the School of Education , I decided ( after much self doubt ) to put the students on their first teaching practice in the fourth and fifth years of schools offering our joint GCE O Level/CSE French for Communication syllabus where they would be expected to work with the teachers in a variety of roles . |
26 | ‘ Nothing in these Rules contained shall be deemed to interfere with the right of His Majesty , upon the humble petition of any person aggrieved by any judgment of the court , to admit his appeal therefrom upon such conditions as His Majesty in Council shall think fit to impose . |
27 | This did not necessarily mean that the churches opposed alleviation of pain , but it did mean that the ministrations of the pastor were much more important than those of the physician , and those of the latter should not be permitted to interfere with the spiritual task of the former . |
28 | Summit leaders recommended that " most-favoured-nation treatment should be applied to trade with the new states [ of the former Soviet Union ] " and lent support for " a phased strategy of co-operation between the Russian government and the IMF [ International Monetary Fund ] " conditional upon " necessary macro-economic conditions [ being ] in place " . |
29 | However , she could be made to leave with a month 's notice if another licensee agreed to take on a 20-year lease there . |
30 | Under section 15(2) ( a ) it is no defence that the bulk can easily be made to correspond with the sample . |