Example sentences of "of [noun sg] with [noun pl] in " in BNC.
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1 | His theories linked the idea of progress with advances in technological knowledge and , by showing how progress follows natural laws , he sought to place the development of political organization on a scientific footing . |
2 | Policy-making dilemmas , we repeat , have been increased in number and difficulty by the necessity of partnership with multi-nationals in the hunt for world market shares . |
3 | That would have to , that would have to come out of any kind of interview with workers in those other groups really . |
4 | Then he added , ‘ Nowadays , when the shepherds come back that way in spring , they prod every square inch of snow with sticks in search of buried frozen tār . ’ |
5 | Where the ego ideal is more highly separated , the process of identification with others in the group will be necessary for the leader to come to replace their ego ideal . |
6 | The primary mechanism suggested for this relationship of war with advances in social welfare is political : that the demands of total war forced government to make concessions to organised labour and the working classes in general which otherwise might have taken much longer to achieve . |
7 | Erm sis you have a lot of contact with tenants in the flats ? |
8 | He is playing a relaxing game of bridge with friends in the cosy surrounds of his lounge and winning commandingly . |
9 | The association of jade with rulers in China is documented in many ways . |
10 | Belgian-born Dr Michel Pacque , who first carried out tests of ivermectin with workers in a rubber plantation in Liberia over several years , is now taking up an appointment as consultant for Sight Savers ( Royal Commonwealth Society for the Blind ) in West Africa with the task of organizing regular supplies . |
11 | Although the Forest Service may offer — and withdraw — timber sales without consulting anyone , it gets close attention from members of Congress with forests in their constituencies . |
12 | The employees in such departments are often out of touch with changes in public opinion , relying instead on research data which may not be framed in a context most likely to discover what changes of attitude are occurring in consumer habits . |
13 | Heath accused her of being " entirely out of touch with events in this country " , and of leaving Major a " ghastly economic legacy " . |
14 | Everybody knows that London prices are out of line with prices in the rest of the country . |
15 | Most of these live in the province of Sichuan with others in Gansu and Shaanxi . |
16 | Theories of postmodernism , therefore , relate the emergence of this type of culture with changes in capitalist economy and the rapid penetration of market relations into all aspects of personal and social life . |