Example sentences of "term with the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Ser Sergio 's in erm London at half term with the Cubs for about four days , I said do you fancy a sort of two or three day break , said one of these short breaks ?
2 ‘ The League will be asked if they will release money back to the club in the short term with the promise that it will be repaid from future transfer revenue .
3 Also back is New Zealander Bruce Cornelius , who will be spending his third term with the Shane Park side .
4 No one , of course , would want to compare the first week of school term with the outbreak of a world war , but we are at the beginning of a New Year and a gateway to the future .
5 After just one term with The Robins , he signed for the Palace .
6 Some options can be long term with the vendor receiving substantial payments , perhaps equivalent to the value of the land in its current use .
7 ( a ) Education. : A clear idea of exactly what coronary artery disease means is most important for the coronary patient if he is to comply in the long term with the advice that he is given , and understand what has happened to him .
8 In a doorway , wedged between a Guardian leader writer and a Kleinian analyst , Alan Headleand and his ex-tutor Otto Werner from the LSE were debating with a fine abstraction and a noble disregard of interruption the question as to whether or not a television programme was a primary product or a service , and whether , by implication or extension , Charles 's production company , Global Information Network ( Telex GIN ) was allied in ideological terms with the manufacturing or the service industries : with equal commitment Esther Breuer and Jules Griffin ( colleague of Liz Headleand ) were discussing the nature of ancestral voices in schizophrenic patients and in the Homeric and Biblical epic , and the portrayal of the Holy Ghost in Anglo-Saxon manuscripts .
9 Could she come to terms with the knowledge that they had been conceived in that dreadful place ?
10 ‘ Over two packs a day , very foolish for a diabetic , but she had n't come to terms with the illness at that stage , and was quite defiant about a number of things , Professor Rankin tells me . ’
11 And the ambition of all the farm lads then was to get on good terms with the maids in in the Plas because after the gentry , they 'd had their dinner , the maids could invite whoever they liked into the cellar and saloon for supper .
12 In all cases English kings had to come to terms with the conditions which they found in these three different countries ; and in all cases they had to show an ability to adapt themselves and their armies to new conditions , military , social and economic , as well as to new thinking in the ways that armies were formed and war was fought .
13 He came close to death and is still trying to come to terms with the attack .
14 Cognitive psychologists must make a greater effort to understand cognition as it occurs in the ordinary environment … pay more attention to the details of the real world in which perceivers and thinkers live … come to terms with the sophistication and complexity of the cognitive skills that people are really capable of acquiring , and with the fact that these skills undergo systematic development .
15 No Prime Minister after Macmillan would maintain the fiction that Britain was on equal terms with the super-powers .
16 What happened next was to so profoundly influence the way the typesetting market operated that it still has n't fully come to terms with the consequences .
17 Though Larry does not ultimately succeed in reintegrating himself into the world , his efforts to come to terms with the consequences of his experience in the death world of his hallucination indicate a potential mode of interpersonal relation that would provide the basis for a more ‘ sane ’ existence .
18 Most came to terms with the constraints of the existing order but a radical wing refused to do so and dreamed of a society run on rational lines laid down by acknowledged experts ( themselves ) — a society they dubbed ‘ socialist ’ .
19 I 've come to terms with the blow and I 've a marriage to arrange .
20 The immaculately restored Standard moved to the Bluebell Railway after one season of service on the Paignton to Kingswear line following a dispute over operating terms with the management of the Dart Valley Railway plc .
21 Many Abyssinians were convinced that the Central Powers would win the war , a conviction strengthened by the British defeats by the Turks at Kut and the Dardanelles ; they felt in consequence that it was prudent to keep on good terms with the Germans and Turks .
22 In Whitehorse the RCAF personnel maintained close relations with the USAF base there , and I was soon on speaking terms with the Americans , most of whom were engaged in flying or servicing aircraft operating between the States and Fairbanks , Alaska .
23 Nizan never quite managed to come to terms with the childhood traumas originating in a family divided through crisis and non-communication .
24 He seems to be on talking terms with the creator and is able to gain permission to tempt Job in a number of horrible ways .
25 I have n't come to terms with the bloke I killed yet , but when I do , it will be frightening .
26 But the intention of the rebels was to bundle Baldwin out of the leadership before opinions had time to come to terms with the election results .
27 In what she acknowledged was a difficult year for the Scottish party , Mrs McGuire admitted the party had yet to fully come to terms with the election defeat last April .
28 Some presidents , however , do come to terms with the multiplicity of constraints that confront them and manage to compile reasonable records of achievement .
29 Incases where carers have participated in permitting freedom of action for the sufferer an and accident has followed the carer may need help in coming to terms with the feelings of guilt which may follow .
30 Ann-Marie is now beginning to come to terms with the night their celebration for both landing new jobs turned to tragedy .
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