Example sentences of "with [det] [noun] [conj] [prep] [pron] " in BNC.
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1 | Whatever their ‘ disciplinary ’ background , they have found that they often have more in common with each other than with their respective academic counterparts who continue to work in pre-feminist or anti-feminist ways . |
2 | The fusion of a Country coalition in opposition to the Court in the early 1690s was assisted by the common experience of working on the Commission of Public Accounts , which led a number of Tories and Whigs to realise they had more in common with each other than with their supposed party allies at Court . |
3 | That is why Canada is the biggest trading partner of the United States , why America is Mexico 's biggest partner , and why the countries of the European Community trade more with each other than with anyone else . |
4 | Dolphins interact with each other and with their environment primarily through the use of sound , and their manipulation of sound greatly surpasses the control shown by any human musician or that needed to operate any human device . |
5 | They would like to keep in touch with each other and with their older sister who wants to stay in the children 's home . |
6 | Within the framework of the Garden 's overall statutory objectives , information policies will help us to decide on resource allocation , improve the way we communicate with each other and with our ‘ users ’ , and provide feedback to Management and the Trustees on the way our resources are being used . |
7 | Numerous factions squabbled with each other and among themselves . |
8 | They were cross with each other because of him , and now Nanny was saying bad things about Smallfry that would make Buddie very , very angry . |
9 | The holy men , whose heirs , such as the Carmelites on the Derwent Ings , now venerate God 's wilderness which washes up to their walls , began to compete with each other as to who could plunder it the most . |
10 | Singing round the piano , playing cards with each other or with our parents , board games of various kinds , and a word game called Lexicon were all family favourites . |
11 | The rationale behind this decision may be to make it abundantly clear that the child is not the product of the adopters ' relationship with each other or with anyone else . |
12 | A dolphin can emit up to 700 clicks a second with this apparatus and from them is able to detect not only the presence of a solid object in the water but to deduce what sort of object it is . |
13 | All academic disciplines or areas of study are faced with the initial problem of providing the layperson or newcomer to the discipline with some idea as to what their subject ‘ is all about ’ . |
14 | Enclose an initial questionnaire , together with some guidance as to what sort of information you require . |
15 | And what he said he said with such authority because of whom he is . |
16 | At that moment a strong sense of oneness is felt with all things because of our dependence on this power and our puniness and helplessness . |
17 | But it does mean that ‘ principles of good design ’ are hard to expound , ambiguous when they can be discerned , and hedged around with many caveats as to their applicability . |
18 | Now working in a larger kitchen and with more staff than in his previous position as head chef at Turner 's restaurant in London , he is able to produce more intricate dishes with a greater number of components to them . |
19 | It 's amazing , even after a forty-year gap , that I feel I still have a rapport with most mineworkers because of my early days in the industry . |