Example sentences of "with [adj] [noun sg] [conj] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Hannah is obviously a natural musician , although the aforementioned modesty forbids her to agree with that assessment But as a child she quickly learned to play both piano and organ with none of the pain and stress often endured by most youngsters , even those with natural skills .
2 A document signed by the bank 's solicitors acknowledged receipt of the sum of £3,000 in full discharge of all claims by the bank against B in connection with the company and all guarantees given by him to the bank in connection with that company and in settlement of any outstanding questions as to the amount due to the bank .
3 As a form of enterprise entirely consistent with that thinking and with the given social order , Co-operation could command the support of John Stuart Mill just as much as it responded to the exhortation of Samuel Smiles .
4 When in subsequent pages therefore we speak of " the teacher " or " the librarian " or " the media specialist " or any other professional , we mean a person acting with that background and in that capacity at any one moment .
5 Sure enough , the effect of age on preparedness to break the law is larger ( +0.250 ) among those with low education than among those who stayed on at school or college beyond 15 ( 0.143 ) .
6 For example , if all syllables are said with low pitch except for one said with high pitch , then the high-pitched syllable will be heard as stressed and the others as unstressed .
7 In comparison with normal serum samples , the mean value of sICAM-1 in 63 samples of patients with colonic carcinoma and in 20 cases of active inflammatory bowel disease is raised about twofold .
8 With guarded relief but without enthusiasm they accepted that , at least as a means of postponing hostilities .
9 In Gwendolen she writes of the way a black woman like Sonia , Gwendolen 's mother , is treated , either with polite indifference or as if she is not there .
10 Would the right hon. Gentleman therefore care to suggest what I should say to those 420 workers in Rolls-Royce who have been ejected from their jobs with scant courtesy and with no idea why it has happened , who have all the skills required for building motor cars and are not to be given the chance to do so ?
11 As opposed to the past , many of these groups and some of their ideas found a wider audience among people with political prestige or in positions of political authority .
12 Governments seem not to have attempted to stimulate new ideas to guide the country to solutions , but have merely implemented outdated principles , the broad bases of which were devised 50 or 100 years ago , varying slightly with political emphasis as to where the Inland Revenue collections should fall .
13 Here there are evident overlaps with political theory and with general sociology , which cultural sociology can not replace but to which it can try to contribute its own kinds of evidence .
14 Here there are again overlaps with political theory and with general sociology , which cultural sociology can not replace but to which it can try to contribute its distinctive emphasis on the organization of signifying systems and on the special kinds of social formation which are professionally concerned with this , among them the difficult category usually identified as ‘ intellectuals ’ .
15 Though associated to a certain extent with the advent of behaviourism in the study of politics ( because of its positivist claims to scientific status ) , elitism actually lends itself easily either to a concentration on institutional or organisational identifications of power , as in the traditional study of politics , or to a concern with socio-political cleavages and integrative factors more associated with political sociology than with political science .
16 In addition , public enterprises also lend themselves to tasks that have more to do with political legitimation than with the needs of the economic system , and which increase the contradictory pressures on them .
17 Some sufferers , notably juveniles addicted to many drugs , commonly take six to eight weeks because their minds are still fogged from the drugs during the first week or two and because they have not been accustomed in their earlier lives to dealing with emotional pain except by recourse to mood-altering chemicals .
18 But when she did , it was always performed with complete aplomb and without the slightest trace of hesitation or reddening of cheeks .
19 Now , in retrospect , she could see that marriage to him would have been a ghastly mistake , and that her reaction to discovering that he had been seeing other women while he had been engaged to her had had far more to do with wounded pride than with a wounded heart .
20 One might say with little exaggeration that in this view the progress of science made philosophy redundant , except as a sort of intellectual laboratory assistant to the scientist .
21 Cabbies have been known to overcharge , to threaten passengers and to hurl their luggage around with little concern as to where it lands .
22 Autoradiogram of mobility of 5 ligated 42-mers with differential deviation & from the full helical turn distance between the GGGCCC and AAAAA motifs ( &=; 0 , 2 , 4 , 6 and 8 bp ) on a 8% nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel .
23 From the seller 's point of view , rather than expose himself to the vagaries of litigation , and the need to negotiate with each buyer as to exactly what remedies are appropriate in each case , it is preferable to set out a specific and detailed procedure which deals with the remedying of defects .
24 As the political scene in Europe changes with each day and as political boundaries are in the process of being redrawn into smaller units , based on racial , religious or cultural differences , so one fears an increased intensity of nationalistic , as opposed to patriotic passions .
25 ( j ) The last major disadvantage of panel interviews is that the interviewers may be more concerned with their relationship with each other than with relating to the candidate .
26 Whatever their ‘ disciplinary ’ background , they have found that they often have more in common with each other than with their respective academic counterparts who continue to work in pre-feminist or anti-feminist ways .
27 That is why Canada is the biggest trading partner of the United States , why America is Mexico 's biggest partner , and why the countries of the European Community trade more with each other than with anyone else .
28 To what extent do people of different nationalities but similar social characteristics , for example , urbanites , have more in common with each other than with fellow citizens with different characteristics , e.g. rural dwellers .
29 The fusion of a Country coalition in opposition to the Court in the early 1690s was assisted by the common experience of working on the Commission of Public Accounts , which led a number of Tories and Whigs to realise they had more in common with each other than with their supposed party allies at Court .
30 Behaviour comes about as a result of the interaction of these mental processes with each other and with the environmental stimuli that are constantly impinging upon our sensory systems .
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