Example sentences of "[vb -s] [to-vb] [adv] with the " in BNC.

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1 Now she 's selling , but nobody wants to carry on with the music.Debbie Kelly reports .
2 The implementation group wants to work closely with the health unions and staff and professional organisations .
3 As such , he or she has to work closely with the creative people and with media : in some agencies this includes the media planning , too .
4 It just has to walk downstairs with the Queen on a lead and sit beside her .
5 It has to do partly with the feeling , particularly powerful in the 19th century , that the proper role of education , at least at the top end , was to equip gentlemen to run the Empire ; and it seemed reasonable at the time to concentrate not upon mechanics , but upon grand ideals , and the classics were studied as if they were a form of theology , a way of revealing fundamental and lasting human truths This , perhaps , is why anti-science is strongest in Britain , because we took Empire most seriously .
6 It has to do rather with the infinite , universal wholeness of all things , of that all-embracing totality which may or may not be labelled ‘ God ’ , but which includes and enfolds everything within itself .
7 Or , for that matter , what good is it to the teacher who has to keep up with the ins and outs of teaching reading and who needs to diagnose the difficulties of Jason , Amil and Della and then advise a colleague on how to help them ?
8 The craftsman has to interact emotionally with the pattern .
9 Garry would dearly love the club captaincy back but he is realistic enough to know he just has to get on with the game .
10 Some of the skinheads I 've met admit to having ‘ gone through ’ one or other of the parties of the extreme right , but , after a brief commitment , the enthusiasm tends to lapse along with the membership .
11 ‘ Rob prefers to come out with the complete picture in his mind , the game-plan mapped out .
12 Observation of this pattern led to Julian Tudor-Hart ( 1971 ) formulating his ‘ inverse care law ’ which he stated as ‘ … the availability of good medical care tends to vary inversely with the need of the population served ’ .
13 Hart 's comparison of medical care provision in poor industrial areas and in affluent areas led him to conclude that there was an ‘ inverse care law ’ in the matching of medical resources with medical needs , i.e. ‘ the availability of good medical care tends to vary inversely with the need of the population served . ’
14 Progress was made on certain aspects of the problem ( for example , the distribution of general practitioners and underprovided specialities like psychiatry and anaesthesia ) , but by 1970 Tudor Hart could still proclaim the truth of the " inverse care law " : " The availability of good medical care tends to vary inversely with the need for it in the population served " ( Hart 1971 : 405 – 12 ) .
15 Premier Yeltsin himself has announced that he intends to cooperate fully with the GenTech experts in an effort ‘ to get to the bottom of this tragedy . ’
16 The oddity is that the jurist seems to deal only with the second question , which is of much less complexity than the first .
17 Just as with the predicate qualifiers , the occupation by postverbals of a syntactic position more commonly taken by an adverb seems to accord well with the fact that a favoured form for questioning them is how ? , unless pre-empted by a question based on pragmatic categories such as what colour ? .
18 The problem , in many cases , seems to lie less with the original ethnographic descriptions than with secondary and tertiary applications where these data are put into service in the construction of grand theoretical schemes .
19 The period of time when acceptance becomes possible seems to link in with the first anniversary of events .
20 Sin and sex do somehow go together and this seems to tie in with the distinction I made much earlier on between the scientific view that man differs from other animals only in degree and the religious view that there is an essential difference in kind .
21 Paul tries to explain why with the expression of his face .
22 A woman spends many years charring in Cremona ; she saves all her money to buy an apartment for her son when he gets married ; her no-good husband , the boy 's father , reappears after years and demands assistance ; she refuses ; when the son is engaged , she relents and negotiates subsidies to her ex-husband , for a suit , a car , a wedding-present ; she organizes a big reception to which she invites all her former employers ; nobody comes except a tennis-star ; there is no sign of the husband ; her lawyer tells her that the girl her son is marrying is her husband 's mistress and that he had already taken over the apartment ; she reflects a moment and decides to carry on with the reception , everything is all right , ‘ if no one notices anything , it is as though nothing has happened ’ ; passers-by are invited to join the wedding-party , which they happily do because the tennis-star is present ; the husband turns up in his new car ; no one takes any notice of him because no one knows who he is , except for the dealer he sometimes does jobs for , who tells him all new cars lose half their value as soon as they are bought and end up on the scrapheap anyway .
23 If the council decides to press ahead with the light rail transit scheme , the first phase is likely to cost around £68m .
24 In Taiwan , though , which likes to keep up with the West , there is a growing feeling that smoking should not be encouraged .
25 From here the way continues to join up with the car park at the Doagh road forest entrance .
26 ‘ Differentiation ’ means inquisition , witch-hunting , denunciations , and punishment ( including in some cases expulsion ) of any member who fails to agree completely with the current party line .
27 European sales accounted for 25% of NCD 's revenues last year — the company expects that figure to rise to 40% this year as Europe begins to catch up with the US in its adoption of X-Windows-based technologies .
28 When sport fails to deal adequately with the excesses of its performers , it is right and proper for the courts to take over .
29 While this small-scale level of analysis has its place , it is severely limited by focusing so much on the detail that it fails to deal adequately with the wider structures which generate these situations .
30 The point , though , is not that his poetry exceeds the truth but that it fails to keep up with the truth , since it can not fully express the Friend 's merits : No one was ever taken in by Shakespeare 's disclaimers of ability , and few people will imagine that , whoever the Friend was — if indeed there was a real-life Friend — Shakespeare has failed to do justice to him ; if anything , rather the opposite .
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