Example sentences of "do [adv] [verb] [noun sg] with " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 They do not associate valour with the handsome and arrogant hunter , and young men are taught to pity such evidence of ‘ lack of control ’ .
2 Its calculations are all relatively local ones : neurones do not make contact with other neurones at any great distance in the same cortical region .
3 * Do not make coffee with boiling water .
4 He came to realize that traditional accounts of science , whether inductivist or falsificationist , do not bear comparison with historical evidence .
5 It is because you do not lose touch with your present identity that I hesitate to ask the question ‘ What is your name ? ’ too early in the session ; the patient 's instinct would be to answer by giving me today 's name .
6 On the one hand , educationalists have argued that segregation of handicapped pupils is wrong and they ought to be taught in ordinary schools , albeit with special lessons and equipment provided , in order that they do not lose touch with ordinary children .
7 What the critics , of the trade unions and managements alike , are really saying is this : that they do not like normality with all its faults .
8 Men do not share support with child care simply because so few of them are responsible for the care of children , and so on .
9 Nevertheless , it is clear enough that the realities of pre-war football do not find agreement with postwar nostalgia .
10 His father would have said , ‘ We sell to schwartzers , we do n't do business with them . ’
11 So you know there 's the , do n't link aggression with assertion , two difference .
12 , you do n't want tea with er milk , you want to have lemon in it ?
13 Indeed , her father had shocked her by breaking this silence and by advising her , when she went up to Cambridge , not to join the Communist Party ; a joke 's a joke , he told her , but you do n't want trouble with visas if ever you want to go to America .
14 We do n't want trouble with the law , do we ?
15 I do n't eat food with dirty hands either .
16 ‘ Come in then , if you 're coming — and do n't bring mud with you . ’
17 to my honourable friend because not only are these er large er particularly the big six er centres of accountancy power pretty well uncontrolled , they dominate the institutions that are meant to regulate them er but when it comes to international er affairs they do n't exchange information with each other .
18 I do n't carry tow-rope with me . ’
19 ‘ I 'm surprised you do n't take lunch with Mike 's secretary , ’ Rob remarked , holding open the door .
20 Do n't get cross with me , I 'm on the level .
21 Alright , do n't get cross with each other !
22 You do n't need help with your practice — I gather the small-animal work is thriving . ’
23 Some people who do n't enjoy sex with their partners are relieved .
24 She is alive and just as attractive as ever , so please do n't lose touch with this thing of beauty that is certainly a joy forever .
25 So long as we do n't confuse faction with history , perhaps we should n't agonise too much over such matters .
26 The best they could recall was his one-liner to Derek Hatton , the Liverpool militant , at Bournemouth in 1985 : ‘ You do n't play politics with people 's jobs , ’ Mr Kinnock told him .
27 Still , learn from experience : and the moral of this story is : do n't mix business with pleasure .
28 Do n't rub hair with a towel after washing — blot and leave it to dry .
29 I suppose it 's because people do n't put canvas with paint daubed on it very high up on their list of personal needs , especially when there are bills to pay and food to buy …
30 Such a picture makes the acquisition of deictic terms seem a miracle , and children do indeed have trouble with them ( Tanz , 1980 ) .
  Next page