Example sentences of "with [adj] [noun pl] [coord] [prep] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | As a result much judicial time was taken up with administrative matters and with interlocutory matters which did not justify the use of the time and expertise of the judges . |
2 | Young people approaching the age when they would no longer be the formal responsibility of the local authorities became the primary consumers of residential care for several reasons : first , many had been placed with a family and temporary readmission to residential care was needed when such placements broke down ; second , some did not wish to join a new family and preferred group living amongst other young people and appointed caregivers ; and third , some were admitted to a residential setting for help with specific problems or as part of a strategy to prepare them for independent living . |
3 | The back feet are somewhat longer than the front feet , equally compact and arched , with strong toes and without dewclaws . |
4 | MAG works with political detainees and with the victims of torture or displacement . |
5 | The issue had come to light following a break-in at the office of his solicitor ( one of a number of such incidents in recent months at premises connected with political parties or with individual politicians ) and the theft of a document on the affair . |
6 | Are we sovereign in defence , in our dealings with multinational corporations or in any significant matter ? |
7 | The Cross is silver and consists of a cross flory terminated in the horizontal and base bars with flaming bombs and in the upper bar with a Tudor rose . |
8 | For a further improvement in our environmental legislation , in future , when consultants are hired — there are some very good environmental consultants — to produce environmental impact assessments to comply with European directives and with our new private and hybrid Bill procedures , the last word on exactly what is contained within the environmental impact assessment should not be left exclusively with the Bill 's promoters . |
9 | Secondly , the relevance of accruals accounting , when it is linked with historic costs and during periods of rising prices , is limited . |
10 | Each is furnished in a modern style with private facilities and at least one balcony . |
11 | It was only in 1989 that anything was heard publicly of schemes to repair the damage , though anyone familiar with the gossip in contracting circles would not have been surprised to learn of NIOC 's plans to tackle the subject : first , to re-operationalize Abadan itself — apparently entirely with home-grown resources and without recourse to imported knowhow — where the damage was assessed at $9 billion , and , second , to add new refineries at Arak and Bandar Abbas . |
12 | They sang the Yorkshire " Christians Awake " and " O Come all Ye faithful " with a mixture of respectability , sober energy and abandon which always confused Stephanie who associated the noise both with repressive habits and with unused forces finding an outlet . |
13 | According to the government White Paper in 1971 , there were only around one hundred mentally handicapped children with foster parents or in private lodgings , and the numbers of fostered and adopted children with mental handicap are still believed to be very small . |
14 | Actual experience of dealing with funding bodies and of ethical dilemmas faced and surmounted is something some of you can contribute … please do . |
15 | Beta-ram is available in two configurations : Model A intended for use with solid scintillators or for Cerenkov counting ; and Model B which is equipped with a pump/mixer module for handling liquid scintillators . |
16 | Collaborative links exist with other university departments , with associated institutions and with overseas universities . |
17 | Recently such minicomputers have become more similar to computers in the mainstream , with extensive data-types and with larger addressing ranges , and are entering the fields of more conventional scientific and business computing ( see for example the early DEC PDP-8 , and the more recent PDP-11 , Data General Nova , and GEC 4000 series ) . |
18 | It covers conduct previously dealt with by a broader range of offences , including , for example , incest , sexual intercourse with under-age girls and with mental defectives , sodomy and gross indecency as well as rape and indecent assault . |
19 | The College of Arms , founded in 1483 , made and authenticated grants of arms , while its heralds were often used by the Crown to treat with foreign powers or with rebels . |
20 | The result was that in subsequent phases of the debt ‘ crisis ’ , the Korean government never had to negotiate with foreign bankers or with the IMF . |
21 | Accommodation with breakfast and dinner can be arranged with french families or in hotels . |
22 | what additional information may be released during verbal discussions with interested parties and in what circumstances . |
23 | Following the Flight of the Earls from Lough Swilly in 1607 , the English government decided to settle Ulster with English settlers and in 1610 William Powell received a grant of 2000 acres in the Manor of Ballynevoran . |
24 | Our Bank Assistant members could have been forgiven for entering the Labour Court with some misgivings but with a good deal of hope . |
25 | He said : ‘ I went to the island of Kos with some mates and at the same time as I was being ill some of my mates were having headaches and feeling ill . |
26 | However , with some materials and for some purposes it could be worth considering . |
27 | The predominant political religious form was and remains , with some modifications and with increasing opposition , a centralizing and conservative catholicism . |
28 | An assignment may be defined as a mini project or as any problem solving exercise with clear guidelines and of specified length . |
29 | Those with unemployed fathers or from families receiving supplementary benefit had the lowest consumption of milk ’ . ’ |
30 | The Victorians tried to spoil the pleasures of puddings with foolish economies and in so doing brought Britain 's once fine reputation to its culinary knees . |