Example sentences of "[vb infin] to terms [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Moreover , he must come to terms with a new awareness of what he has previously accepted , perhaps without thinking , which under the intense microscope of social enquiry may well seem to verge on the ludicrous or to be morally indefensible .
2 Under the auspices of Scottish/Canadian editor Andy Gray , the paper was faced with a dilemma and one that it had great difficulty resolving , namely how a paper still steeped in show business traditions could come to terms with a new music that was deliberately and defiantly anti-commerciality and the supposed ‘ circus ’ of the pop world .
3 Presidents and their staff must come to terms with a powerful , but formless and undisciplined , legislative branch ; however , this will not , by itself , be sufficient .
4 But before Life President Hastings Kamuzu Banda , 85 , can safely be put to rest , he must come to terms with an explosive mixture of secular and sacred trouble brewing in Malawi .
5 Samuel Courtauld , the textile industrialist , and his supporters warned that industrialists must come to terms with the new mood in favour of government intervention .
6 Exactly how architecture might come to terms with the invisible is a tricky subject , which Sudjic hints at but does not elaborate .
7 Importantly , they may in fact be helping you come to terms with the traumatic experience .
8 For this reason we spend a lot of time with relatives trying to help them come to terms with the whole admission process .
9 A small number are able to manipulate the new situation because they are able to get credit , to establish good terms of trade with middlemen and to generally come to terms with the different conditions .
10 I could never come to terms with the Big Idea .
11 While Britain got used to Wilson , the Americans did n't come to terms with the post-Kennedy era .
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