Example sentences of "the [noun] [verb] with [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | The algorithm implemented with this particular robot could re-learn after its TV cameras were jogged . |
2 | See how the response goes with this and then |
3 | The inability to operate with high levels of trust itself implies the use of more complex formal organisational arrangements as a replacement for the more informal co-ordination mechanisms which are possible when there is a higher level of good will . |
4 | Yet the judge left as alternative verdicts open to the jury , guilty of causing grievous bodily harm , contrary to section 20 or guilty of assault occasioning actual bodily harm , contrary to section 47 , without indicating to counsel his intention of doing so or giving the defence the opportunity to deal with such alternatives . |
5 | Acting , he told me , was ‘ a wonderful job that gives me the opportunity to drink with some really good friends in exotic places around the world ’ . |
6 | In the context of an employing organisation , this would imply that an individual 's major motivation would be not so much the job itself as the opportunity to mix with other people . |
7 | The children should be given the opportunity to mix with handicapped people , and encouraged to participate in voluntary activities , helping in homes and at social clubs for the handicapped . |
8 | Individuals can benefit from the opportunity to interact with other professionals from different perspectives . |
9 | With the three other members of the quartet sadly now dead , Smailovic relished the opportunity to play with another musician and to further affirm the presence of cultural values in the city . |
10 | Most rowing clubs do n't insist on immediate payment of an annual membership fe ( usually between £80 and £100 ) and should give you the opportunity to train with other club members before making a commitment . |
11 | Benefits include free uniform , seven weeks annual holiday ( subject to Crab Key 's alert status ) and the opportunity to work with one of the world 's finest scientific minds . |
12 | Naturally , we would be delighted to have the opportunity to work with Big Brother Inc . |
13 | The opportunity to work with enthusiastic teachers from different school situations was indeed most supportive . |
14 | Nine out of ten of the users known to each agency lived with one or more adults , and the majority lived with one or more children . |
15 | It is the responsibility of fundholding general practices to decide priorities for research in the context of the population 's needs and the contracts set with each provider . |
16 | In the centrepiece is Christ , seated on a throne , and the remainder illustrates with extraordinary clarity and detail the Romanesque conception of heaven and hell , with the celestial delights for the fortunate and the demons clawing upwards to capture the souls of the damned . |
17 | It was as if , having seen the contents of Mr Broadhurst 's fitted cupboard , he were now prepared to allow me some knowledge of the rituals connected with this apparatus . |
18 | It was here that the wife of Prince Windischgrätz was killed by a stray bullet and this caused the prince to react with unnecessary violence against the protesters . |
19 | The CO chuckled with unashamed glee at the little joke he was about to make at Charles 's expense . |
20 | ‘ Sure , we can adapt and get the ball forward quickly when needs be , but that 's all about having the variety to cope with any situation . |
21 | Although the euphoria associated with automatic decision-making has largely gone , the more realistic concepts of decision-support systems and executive support systems have certainly not disappeared . |
22 | The bluetits provided the normal grubs and caterpillars , which the blackbird supplemented with juicy worms . |
23 | The change came with parliamentary reform in the nineteenth century and the emergence of large disciplined political parties in the 1860s and 1870s . |
24 | Trades Unions have the expertise to deal with this , and to tackle employers in the event of such a case arising . |
25 | But she felt curiously light-headed , detached , as if she 'd been pushed too far , and her brain had temporarily given up the struggle to cope with this Alice in Wonderland situation . |
26 | Tame films of this sort show directors and writings giving up the struggle to deal with contemporary anxieties . |
27 | It is sometimes obscure and the writer confesses with some shame that he possessed for some forty years a Tudor binding with the cunningly interwoven initials ‘ R.B. ’ — those of an unidentified London binder working c.1550–81 . |
28 | ‘ I would not , ’ the Lieutenant said with cold courtesy , ‘ wish to feast on a Battle Brother who was not of my Chapter . ’ |
29 | The Board operates with two standing Committees . |
30 | It was intended as a high-performance set which could inherit the reliability associated with previous BR ( SR ) DEMUs , thus beating the older , inherently unreliable diesel-mechanical multiple units hands down . |