Example sentences of "put up with [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Our audiences put up with a lot , but they will not accept total inadequacies for every performance .
2 We put up with the buckets to catch the drips in the dressing-room at Taunton in order to enjoy the wisteria round the door of the George at Bewley . ’
3 So nothing to do with pets really , just put up with the hope or you can always take yourself with you miaow spreading the .
4 put up with the sex for the secret , I put up
5 H. P. You put up with the discipline because of the unemployment .
6 Overall what stands out from intercity comparisons such as these is that firstly , London 's difficulties are echoed elsewhere , which is comforting since it is generally easier to put up with a problem if you know that others share it .
7 What was more , they 've had to put up with a relief milker while their herdsman was laid up with flu .
8 Dogs , on the other hand , have to put up with a range of 1 dioptre all their lives .
9 After 1714 the balance shifted to a point where the King and the Commons had something like mutual vetoes : the King chose the ministers and could normally be sure of not having to put up with a minister he disliked , but the Commons could reject a minister they disliked by refusing to vote for the taxes he proposed , thus pushing the King into dismissing him .
10 As well as the noise the couple would have to put up with a landfill site within a few yards of their garden .
11 It is too late for British Telecom to return to its old ways if only because the public now knows that it does not have to put up with a telephone system built for the 1950s .
12 ‘ Yes , I am remembering ; and please remember , too , Great-grandmother , that I am not a miss any more ; I am a married woman who has run your house for years and has had to put up with a man of your choosing . ’
13 It is said he had to put up with a sofa in the corridor until his identity was revealed .
14 George got financial support from Parliament for troops to defend his Electorate and they did well enough to maintain his position , but he could not establish in office the ministers he really wanted , who would have been committed to full-scale involvement in Germany , so that he had to put up with a government which was not completely devoted to fighting on the continent of Europe .
15 ‘ She 's a very sensitive child , though she 's had to put up with a lot already , her mother being ill so much . ’
16 At football matches or at confrontations at seaside resorts the police have to put up with a lot of abuse .
17 ‘ I keep imagining this morning that I have — please believe me , Milena , because when we 're married you will have to put up with a lot of this , but I keep imagining that I have lots of little crisp sepia legs . ’
18 He conducted himself impeccably , he was open and honest and had to put up with a lot from the press and media .
19 We had to put up with a succession of dead grannies , occult trivia , psychic charades , aura readings and attempts to probe the future .
20 ‘ While in times past a royal wife would be expected simply to put up with a situation no matter how desperate , the Princess of Wales belongs to a generation that has come to expect greater things from life and certainly from relationships , ’ she wrote .
21 So now you do n't have to put up with a two-star performance from ordinary mercury-free batteries , when there is now a new four star alternative .
22 ‘ It makes me vomit ’ , she went on , ‘ to think that I am going to have to put up with a load of garbage like you in my school for the next six years .
23 Then you would n't have people thinking that going to a Phish concert means you have to put up with the smell of somebody who did n't do very well at school .
24 ‘ They already have enough to put up with the cattle market and Chatsworth Warehouse which both generate heavy delivery lorries . ’
25 But if you can not afford to leave , might it not be better to put up with the treatment that you have received rather than becoming unemployed ?
26 It seems that England might just have to put up with the barracking of the public , press and the other home nations Wales , Scotland and Northern Ireland .
27 As Claud Mullins , a London magistrate , commented on the plight of separated women in 1935 : ‘ Day by day as I watch the women who come into court on summonses for arrears — probably the least attractive of all Police Court work — I sometimes wonder whether after all many of them would not have done better to put up with the ills they had , rather than to have placed their faith in court orders ’ .
28 ‘ Josh will have to put up with the life that his mother can afford to lead . ’
29 Since when he 'd left her alone again , and Dolly was having to put up with the April breeze .
30 ‘ He 'd been out of football for nine months in France , and he had to put up with the boo-ing .
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