Example sentences of "usually [verb] with [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Every year there was a big noisy carnival with its ghost trains and chairoplanes , and yet matrons with shallow baskets did sociable shopping excursions usually ending with coffee in Marine Road and tut-tutting over the state of the borough .
2 The process usually starts with practice of the initial movements for putting on a particular garment , before the garment is given to the patient .
3 Though quick to qualify it , people with a taste for economics usually react with delight to Mr Coase 's insight .
4 Expert adjudication on technical issues in the haulage industry will usually meet with approval from experienced goods vehicle operators who might be surprised at the lack of specific expertise in road haulage matters among the ranks of the judiciary .
5 Most passage , however , occurs from mid-April to mid-May , when a marked movement along the coast , usually associated with passage of other species such as Bar-tailed Godwits , Scoter , or terns , takes place .
6 The concept of aequa mens , a balanced spirit , is originally Stoic , and is also very Horatian ; in Leapor 's work , however , the idea is usually associated with resignation to the will of God .
7 The notion of common substance is then usually associated with belief in descent from a common ancestor ( or ancestress ) : from a male first father by male links only ( patrilineal descent ) ; from a female first mother through female links only ( matrilineal descent ) .
8 Great suffering is usually identified with unhappiness for most people , if it also generates feelings of hopelessness , meaninglessness and despair .
9 Crystallizable polymers consist of a mass of tiny crystals , usually mis-oriented with respect to one another and embedded in non-crystalline material .
10 The perception of shape and pattern in apparently disorderly ( but dynamic and mobile ) things is usually mentioned with reference to visual perception , and it is commented on in the sciences and the arts alike : it is prominent , for example , in the notebooks of the poet Gerard Manley Hopkins ( J. Milroy , 1977 ) , in his careful descriptions of cloud formations , waterfalls and other dynamic phenomena , and much of the poet 's imagery depends on a kind of ‘ observer 's paradox ’ ( rather different from the familiar Labov version ) , through which a dynamic phenomenon can nonetheless appear to have stable shapes and patterns within it and , conversely , a static phenomenon may appear to contain mobility .
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