Example sentences of "that [verb] with [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Colonialism is not a dirty word at a new Fulham antique furniture shop that evokes with affectionate nostalgia the era of the Raj in India . |
2 | I was a teenager , prone to the daftness that goes with that age group , and knew no better . |
3 | At the time , people felt they had secure jobs er in the M O D and the dockyard and so people accepted that with pensions and everything that goes with that sort of secure job , now of course the whole situation is enormously diff different and I was saying to , I have some French people staying with me this morning and I was , they were asking me about wages and I was saying to my daughter who works er on a Thursday evening in the local Sainsburys , earns more per hour than a friend of mine , well two friends of mine , one of whom is a carpenter , a fully qualified carpenter and the other is a motor mechanic , and that 's an indication of the sort of level of wages that people are paid in this area . |
4 | Being unemployed also means that you are deprived of the social contacts and involvement in collective activity that goes with paid employment ; you lack its external stimulus to activity and time-structure ; and you lack the status and sense of value provided by a job and expressed in terms of social esteem as well as money . |
5 | The response in Britain was not quite so dramatic the National Grid was untroubled by the kind of power surge that goes with huge viewing figures . |
6 | The Orb 's first tune goes on and on ; a kind of broken , haunting sonata for new technology that builds with enormous subtlety . |
7 | Gasping at the totally unexpected movement , and the searing shock of his touch , Polly stared up into eyes that gleamed with cold fire . |
8 | And Titleist once again rewarded that trust with more wins , more top finishes and more money earned than all other balls combined . |
9 | They 're the classic example of a band that thinks with one brain , and if you took one component out it would n't happen . ’ |
10 | Table 5 shows the percentage of respondents that agreed with particular statements about solicitors . |
11 | He could see by the dark light that came down from the night sky , a sky that glowed with vivid city lights , that on stands in nearby cages other eagles were listening to his story and staring at him silently . |
12 | The results in this paper demonstrate that a portion of the VZV 140k protein comprising the C-terminal portion of region 1 and all of the conserved region 2 can be expressed in isolation in E.coli as a non-fusion DNA binding domain peptide that interacts with multiple sequences in the VZV gene 62 promoter . |
13 | Open stone staircases swept up to bedrooms that bristled with floor-to-ceiling windows . |
14 | Right , so if we want to be er ninety percent certain about inference that corresponds with ten percent significance level and our critical value there is one point seven zero . |
15 | There is no reason why the intermediate stage should not be eliminated or why a search that starts with alphabetical index terms can not be directly translated into records at appropriate class numbers . |
16 | Version 6 will include anti-virus software , but will Microsoft be able to keep you up to date with the new viruses that appear with frightening regularity ? |
17 | Regions of the POU domain that interact with other components of the transcriptional apparatus have been inferred from mutational analyses of Oct-1 and Oct-2 . |
18 | to indentify the local pressures that interact with central resource allocations to produce the observed levels of provision ; |
19 | She poked again — dug right down to the bottom and up through the shambles came something that signalled with painful clarity . |
20 | Mr Hadley , who teaches at the Grants School of Wine , cites studies which have found that compared with lifelong abstainers , moderate drinkers show a 26 per cent reduction in the incidence of heart trouble . |
21 | In summary , this study shows that compared with medical treatment the heater probe reduces the rebleeding rate in a non-bleeding visible vessel by 62% , there was no death , and complications were minimal . |
22 | Loss of effectiveness in a shock US is amply demonstrated , for instance by the loss of the CR that occurs with prolonged training . |
23 | In my case , for four or five years I think I was probably the only person that played with digital delays and two amps and all that , and it was like a new thing . |
24 | Camb looked compassionately at the quivering febrile mouth and the long unfiled nails that played with those rings . |
25 | That happened that happens with all staff changes where you need a degree of skill its compounded by the fact that all nine will be changed at the same time and as I said before is a total loss of the skills base . |
26 | Now they and their mothers could share more things because they had been through the same experiences — something that happens with older mothers and their parents as well . |
27 | I have few clues that would let me construct a picture of my mother 's childhood , that would explain her denial of mine as my own , and the rage that came with that denial . |
28 | The tears that came with this knowledge were now true tears of grieving for his father 's death , and the knowledge that they would never communicate with each other . |
29 | Their regular promenading grounds are the streets that abound with dirty bookshops and prostitutes and Chinese restaurants . |
30 | While the known antioxidant actions of the aminolsalicylates are compatible with the proposal that ROM play a major role in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease , proof of the hypothesis must await the outcome of controlled trials in the human disease of more specific agents that interfere with oxidative metabolism . |