Example sentences of "with [pers pn] [pos pn] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Many nomads have settled in villages , bringing with them their ancestral compositions and weaving techniques , and few villages have escaped the broader cultural and rug-making influences spreading outwards from the towns .
2 As 19th Century Coniston filled up with Irish , Welsh , and Cousin Jacks , they brought with them their own fears .
3 One is that if aesthetic pleasure is separated from objective study then the most dreadful landscapes can come alive after close research and bring with them their own form of satisfaction .
4 And many of them will be bringing with them their own silver dream machines — immortalised by Steven Spielberg 's ‘ Back to the Future ’ movie .
5 Thus , the intellectual climate was transformed by refugees from the failed Paris Commune , and from Spain , Italy and Germany , who had brought with them their socialistic education , which led to the general practice of mutual aid among the immigrants — a practice little known to the people of Argentina' ( Juan Justo , in Aguilar : 1968 , p. 79 ) .
6 They also brought with them their beloved dill pickles .
7 Following on from Morrissey 's terse communication of last week , we , the NME , will now share with you our secret weapon .
8 I envisage that the strategic analysis aspects of the assignment would be completed within an overall elapsed time of [ specify number , say eight ] weeks , provided that SPG can discuss with you your strategic objectives towards the beginning of this period .
9 CRIME STOPPING CRIME STARTS WITH YOU YOUR PRACTICAL GUIDE
10 After eight years , young Mrs Joyce left her husband for another partner , taking with her their two daughters , upon whom William Joyce resigned all claim .
11 Aunt Margaret had with her her three sons , Cedric , Ronald and small Kenneth who was devoted to Heather .
12 Much to the prince 's disgust the captain of the Du Teillay refused to join in the action for fear of endangering his passenger 's life , but the Elisabeth suffered 57 killed and 176 wounded and such serious damage that she had to be sent back to Brest , taking with her her precious cargo of arms and French volunteers .
13 After her death , he advertised for a housekeeper with a view to matrimony but unfortunately the first lady who took the job decamped after a few days , taking with her his prized possessions and helped by a male friend who apparently had kept in the background .
14 To be like other people : gardening at the weekend , scent of freshly-mown grass , children playing on the lawn ; wife in a cotton dress , long-legged , her smile sharing with him their private memories , future secured .
15 — be prepared to share with him your present pattern of prayer and how this relates to patterns of corporate worship in your own church .
16 Our grief at his passing , just a few days before we could celebrate with him his eightieth birthday , is only diminished by the knowledge that he left us knowing that the fruits of his inspired leadership and labours are imperishable .
17 He 'll be bringing with him his popular quiz games , but not all his old listeners .
18 Peter sat in the studio with a guest naturalist who had brought with him his own bits of film .
19 He brought with him his own group of masons , and a letter of introduction from Humphrey Lovell , the queen 's master mason , according to which he had previously been working for Sir Francis Knollys [ q.v. ] , probably at Caversham House , near Reading .
20 One of its central tenets is that studying black civilisation will boost the self-esteem of black students , and with it their academic performance .
21 Perhaps by magic , her hands were flowing with lotus oil , and with it her firm fingers anointed him .
22 As the most suitable to sum them up provisionally let us pick ‘ Face facts ’ , a roughly formulated injunction which carries with it its own punishments for disobedience , without any need to appeal to God , philosophers or the police .
23 The mega-merger brought with it its own lexicon and culture .
24 Put in the baldest terms , one can say that the result of all this was that man — or , perhaps I should say , the hominid ancestors of modern man — became able to hunt and that , with the success of the hunting economy , came culture and civilization as we know it and with it its psychological corollary : the superego .
25 So if , for example , I believe that you 've got your belief about whether there 's honey by an especially good method which I ca n't use ( because I ca n't get at your honey pot ) , then I will naturally want to adopt your belief , in order to acquire with it its high chance of being true .
26 But the owner 's possession , and with it his actual power to exercise his rights , is for the time being gone ; he must recover the watch — as he may even lawfully do by his own act — before he can be said to be again in possession of it .
27 As long as a son holds on to the mother as a love-object he must ineluctably be in conflict with the father , just as , conversely , as soon as he accepts the paternal authority and identifies with his father to constitute his superego he must suppress his fundamental parricidal antagonism and with it his incestuous fixation .
28 for some days after the flight , the body clock — and with it our daily rhythms — will tend to lag behind .
29 In this issue , Cathy McCormack shares with us her personal perspectives on this process and how it infiltrates many levels .
30 Richard Parker Landscapes Colour Around Us , The Art Gallery , Queensway , Billingham ( until June 27 ) IN what is effectively a full-scale retrospective with work that goes back to 1958 , Richard Parker shares with us his great love of landscape .
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