Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [adv] with [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | In truth , Diana got on rather well with Adeane , who introduced her to many of the women she accepted as her ladies-in-waiting while she was an enthusiastic matchmaker , continually trying to pair off the difficult bachelor with unattached ladies . |
2 | She still sees Bailey often , gets on extremely well with Catherine , Bailey 's current wife , and if he is out of town for long periods of time , they speak on the telephone . |
3 | Right , well I 've been waiting since er what is it twelve o'clock this morning , what on earth this question can be and I certainly did n't er come up with this possible , erm all I can say is that I have always got on extremely well with Tony and . |
4 | They 'd danced to Michael 's band and her glossy pink trousers flashed and moved in the dimmed lights , and he had felt elated and mildly drunk , and had lost most of the inhibitions he 'd had about dancing , until it became clear to his confused brain that the drummer , who had soft dark hair and was probably a potential Celtic supporter , was getting on so well with Amanda that perhaps they should move on elsewhere , and he swayed out of the room , pushing her in front of him , and bumped into someone at the door , and had realised it was the man in the raincoat , only he was in a dark suit and a tie with geometric designs . |
5 | She got on so well with composer Jeff Wayne that he is also producing her first solo album . |
6 | Is n't it amazing — her getting on so well with Uncle Félix ? |
7 | Her anguish , Henry noted , went down rather well with Donald . |
8 | For some reason , Abel 's offering seemed to go down much better with God than his brother 's did . |
9 | With the advent of cheap microcomputers in the mid-eighties , the typical humanities scholar was more likely to be found doing research at home on a personal computer , attached no doubt to a network , but engaged much less interactively with colleagues in the computing centre . |
10 | Whilst still positive , Solihull secondary school teachers are somewhat less so with regard to the flexibility and effectiveness of the booklet than with its general utility . |
11 | It is always laborious to find the components of a vector , so we are not much better off with A than with H or B. It turns out however that A is a more basic quantity of physics than B. Since B is given by the curl of A it is possible that A is finite while its curl is zero . |
12 | ‘ So why do you disapprove of my getting along so well with Emily ? ’ |
13 | But the pomp and splendour did not go down so well with Craig Chalmers . |
14 | As it was , she went down so badly with flu that she had to be confined to her room for the duration . |
15 | ‘ They 've put Charles on to inspiring Donne , ’ explains Prue to the people around the middle of the table , ‘ because he did so fantastically well with Yeats . ’ |
16 | Plaice with smoked salmon , garnished with a fine , peppery leek and watercress sauce is a full-flavoured , main-course dish that went down especially well with Henry Lindeman 's Sémillon-Chardonnay from south-east Australia ( Spar , £3.99 ; Peter Dominic and Bottoms Up , £4.99 ) . |
17 | I 'd hesitate to give much weight to her story in the normal run because she does seem to have a screw loose , but it ties in so well with Norman Pinder 's recollections , and they are totally independent witnesses . ’ |
18 | From the start this was bound to be contentious , for it tied in so obviously with concern about newspaper chains , the power of large circulations and the alleged dangers of a too one-sided party press . |
19 | The finger , too , seemed to be going down fantastically well with Quigley . |
20 | Okay well that would again tie perhaps more in with culture . |
21 | Since starting therapy I find that I 'm behaving much more honestly with friends and colleagues . |
22 | Electrons interact much more strongly with matter . |
23 | Divorce was seen to be harder on the women than the men , who could get out of their family responsibilities so much more easily with divorce than without it . |
24 | These are a powerful way of ‘ talking ’ with your subconscious , since it deals much more readily with symbols and images than with words , and does not distinguish between a ‘ real ’ experience and one which is vividly imagined . |
25 | You collaborate much more readily with industry . |
26 | To meet the needs of pupils growing up in such an environment , RE must not assume any religious faith — it has to start much further back with questions of why there is such a phenomenon as religion . |
27 | My luggage had been weighed down quite heavily with cheeses — two pieces of packaged stilton from Marks and Spencer and four small cheddars . |
28 | Private pietism fits in very nicely with privatisation , but then so too does Transcendental Meditation or the playing of Trivial Pursuits . |
29 | Borough Councils with their power to offer public works could , as we have seen , deal only very imperfectly with unemployment . |
30 | Today many decisions are taken in private party meetings , only very occasionally with officers in attendance and then normally only for specific items . |