Example sentences of "[adj] that [verb] with [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Will your cooker stand the strain of the festive season and all the extra entertaining that comes with it ?
2 However , Pakistan have , in my opinion , paid for the Gatting/Rana affair and all that went with it in 1987 .
3 The hospital and all that went with it had been such an oasis in the alarming wilderness of doing everything for , and chiefly by , myself ; now it came to the point of leaving it , I was scared .
4 1988 , etc. ) , there was a tendency to acquiesce in this conventional wisdom and all that went with it : the reduction of what ought to be a complex and multi-faceted debate to the simple adversarialism of ‘ formal ’ versus ‘ informal ’ , ‘ didactic ’ versus ‘ exploratory ’ , teacher as ‘ instructor ’ versus teacher as ‘ facilitator ’ , rote learning versus ‘ discovery ’ , ‘ subjects ’ versus ‘ integration ’ , class teaching versus group work , ‘ traditional ’ versus ‘ progressive ’ , ‘ bad practice ’ versus ‘ good ’ .
5 The Thaxted tradition which he established consisted of three features : firstly , a very thoroughgoing Christian socialism ; secondly , a marked attention to music and all that went with it ; and thirdly , a liturgiological care for distinctively English medieval antecedents .
6 But he had remembered — the name and all that went with it .
7 All that remained with her was the look in her son 's eyes , a look of absolute loathing and hatred , a look of betrayal .
8 From this secure position , it extends a long tube , its siphon , along the tunnel and into the open water to suck in a current that brings with it minute particles of food .
9 He explained that the examiner 's hypothesis influences his formulation of questions and biases his treatment of answers by inclining him to fasten onto those that agree with his hypothesis and overlook those that do not .
10 We should not underestimate the power of official systems of classification of children , even when they are generally held to be inadequate by those that work with them .
11 Trivers ( 1971 ) used essentially this argument to account for the evolution of ‘ reciprocal altruism ’ , in which animals cooperate only with those that cooperate with them .
12 A stout man in sober grey that contrasted with his many-coloured face and cheerful manner , leaned towards the Captain .
13 This hardly counts as internal fertilisation , but the sea-horse , a shorter relative of the pipe-fish that swims with its body held vertically and not horizontally , has taken the principle of male-brooding considerably further .
14 It is also true that to wrestle with his thought demands a rethinking of the Gospel : that his students found him so witty and stimulating a teacher is understandable .
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