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

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1 Because of this he often failed to bring about cures and eventually became disillusioned with hypnosis as a form of therapy .
2 Isaac and his brother Jacob [ q.v. ] clubbed together to produce Hebrew books for the Christian market , and thereby became acquainted with some of the most eminent Christian Hebraists of the day .
3 Mulhern does n't sell horses but he was partly influenced this time by Jeremy Maxwell who used to train On the Other Hand and he eventually agreed to part with the gelding to Robert Ogden with a view to running in the Grand Military Gold Cup at Sandown .
4 Slight and in his mid-twenties , he moved with energetic nervousness , his sharp eyes darting in all directions , as if on constant guard against a knife in the back — a worrying habit which I have since come to associate with compulsive back-stabbers .
5 ‘ There were experienced rescuers at the resort but doctors from the hospital were probably better placed to deal with the victims . ’
6 It only became connected with the miracle because both events took place in the same village .
7 They wilt readily learn to distinguish light from dark and there is some evidence that they can also distinguish patterns and colours , although it must be said that this capacity is extremely limited compared with the normal capacities of the animals concerned ( Pasik and Pasik 1982 ) .
8 I go to night schools and force myself to mix , but I only tend to socialise with my present or former care assistants , former Le Court friends and a few other people .
9 Elizabeth Daunton much enjoyed staying with Ann Toulmin in Oxford and attending a Somerville reunion .
10 Which I have inadvertently forgotten to bring with me .
11 That incident probably made John 's triumph all the sweeter a few months later , when he gleefully described flirting with a particularly desirable man , one of the supposed ringleaders of the earlier occasion .
12 Rosemary apparently has to cope with her husband 's anxiety that she could only be cured by becoming more ‘ assertive ’ .
13 Perhaps it all has to do with being unworldly and prepared to believe in the little people at the end of the garden .
14 The student went on to say that , though he had received help for a specific question , he had not obtained enough understanding to cope with his future library problems .
15 I only want to deal with it in broad terms and that is that compared to earlier E I Ps where West Yorkshire authorities were saying , Do n't take too many people into North Yorkshire , as you 'll undermine our regeneration to paraphrase .
16 He was delighted with all we 'd done to make the house habitable in under a week and greatly enjoyed partying with friends .
17 Now she 's on powerful drugs to suppress the problem … and she only has to cope with a one or two fits each day .
18 Any software claiming to be pan-European obviously needs to comply with major accounting standards such as the 4th and 7th EC directives , for example , and would benefit from links to online databases providing up-to-date information on legislation across the EC .
19 This second bacterial pattern was only seen associated with a degenerated epithelium presenting with few apical mucoid granules , fewer microvilli , cytoplasmic vacuolisations , and absence of mucus layer , and it was found in all the ultrastructural sections in which the second or third pattern of contact with gastric epithelium was present ( sections from biopsy specimens of 31 patients ) .
20 He was quite a frightening animal to look at , with his sharp white fangs gleaming against his black muzzle , but he was n't really threatening to bite a piece out of Angela — only wanting to play with her .
21 A neat passage of midfield play involving Russell , Cunningham and Tony Shepherd end with Davidson making an incisive run ; as Glens defenders waited for a pass the little full-back suddenly let fly with his right foot , squeezing the ball past Grace .
22 A high position — 30mm above normal — can be manually selected to cope with flooding and snow .
23 Gowing goes on to indicate the health hazard arising from the intense alpha activity of polonium at the Windscale site : ‘ Alpha handling procedures had to be greatly upgraded to deal with polonium , and for a time everyone had to work with respirators …
24 My problem , therefore , would perhaps appear to lie with my speakers , but the G-K cost a fortune so I would be surprised if it were at fault .
25 Certainly , I 'd I 'd very much like to agree with what that lady said .
26 At the time of manufacture the foil would obviously become mixed with other materials .
27 The alternative argument has it that since people and situations differ you are better equipped to deal with them if you have a wide repertoire of behaviours to draw on .
28 Begun in 1960 , in 1984 the fair moved to the ample space of the Fiera which is better equipped to deal with the growing number of visitors and exhibitors .
29 If she had been feeling fitter and healthier , she certainly would have been better equipped to deal with the stresses , and to control her weight gain before it got out of hand .
30 But do n't be fooled , because 1993 will also be a tough year but with the experience gained in 1992 , I am sure we are better equipped to deal with it and make it a very successful year for Hygiene .
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