Example sentences of "and [adv] with [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I happen to know , from a friend of mine , that Robert Trivers , long before he was the great evolutionary biologist he is today , when he was an illustrator of children 's books , argued the whole thing to and fro with a friend of mine who was a Freudian analyist and he tells me that in the beginning all they talked about was Freud .
2 A milk-float was groaning its way up and a boy of about my age ran to and fro with a milk-crate .
3 Marcus , putting his hands upon the board at the foot , moved the bed slightly on its casters , moving it gently to and fro with a movement as of one rocking a cradle .
4 There was something like a regular cursus honorum : the capable chaplain was provided with endowment in the form of canonries and dignities in this and that cathedral , for which he was expected to perform little or no duty , and eventually with a bishopric .
5 like that and eventually with the help of my mum I could join sentences together to make a real piece of writing .
6 The client must have confidence in the conveyancer and the conveyancer must maintain that confidence by undertaking each step in each transaction competently and carefully , and above all , must understand at all times the importance of communicating regularly and effectively with a client .
7 It is mentioned here because encounters with such forms of suffering may distress practitioners so much as to block off their own capacity to deal sensitively and effectively with the people concerned .
8 On Sept. 2 the government announced a three-stage programme to remove the vestiges of communist control and integrate Estonia politically and economically with the rest of Europe .
9 She heard it before she saw it , murmuring louder and louder with the squeals of gulls cutting shrilly across the regular soft booming of the waves .
10 She swept him off his feet as the forward momentum of her lunge carried her upright , shedding Perks left and right with a shake of her shoulders .
11 And suddenly with the woman 's cheese plant tickling his ear he thought of Lee up in Jubilee Wood , running down the ride howling .
12 Eight-year-olds were beginning to acknowledge the distinction , in that when they used the causal connectives in the deductive mode they appropriately followed because with evidence and so with a conclusion .
13 It has been present from the beginning as a primitive rhythm , that element associated with the ‘ auditory imagination ’ of poetry , and so with the savage in the jungle and his gods , ‘ His rhythm was present in the nursery bedroom …
14 And so with the help of these , they just managed to do a bit of slate , but if them had not gone back , I thinks this this strike would have turned the other way .
15 Burma had been starved of books and so with the assistance of W. Lockett , who had worked with J.S. Furnivall in the pre-war bookshop , I secured the co-operation of the SPCK in a plan for a general bookshop .
16 And he seemed sincere enough now , his piece of paper held ready in his hands , and so with the safety of the newsdesk between them she reached across and took it .
17 He is almost certainly to be identified with the Osbald of Alcuin 's letter to Aethelred and perhaps with the Osbald who burnt a ‘ patrician ’ of King Aelfwald in 780 .
18 And it is not easy to discover any more covert or sophisticated moral view of the characters and the events of the poem : it does not dwell in any suggestive way on the irremediable carnality of human desires , and only with a degree of distortion and uncalled for determination could we assert that the poem is significantly antifeminist or anticlerical .
19 The coalition facilitated a realignment from the two-party Liberal-Unionist contest in 1914 to the Labour-Conservative battles of the late 1920s ; only with the triumph of coalition in 1916 did the old politics die , and only with the destruction of coalitionism in 1924 could the new politics be born .
20 She felt depressed , and only with an effort was she able to chat to Matt with any degree of cheerfulness .
21 The historian has to concern himself more and more with the disentangling of mass trends and less and less with the exploration of the work of individuals .
22 Since Ruth was required to be less and less with the children she found herself with too much time on her hands , and since she was unused to idleness she found the vacant hours trying .
23 I am getting thrown a little more , but I feel stronger and better with a lot more aggression . ’
24 Yet Appendix II ( section 3 ) shows that many people feel that bank loans would be cheaper for them than HP or finance company loans , and better with the manager ‘ a real person ’ they could go to if there was some difficulty over repayments .
25 It was placed a little further forward along the wall of the building than would have been selected by a novice and apparently with a knowledge of the positions of the interior walls .
26 There should be liaison with the staff of the museum , and especially with the museum education officer if there is one .
27 With the increase of industry and commerce in the nineteenth century , and especially with the development of joint stock companies with limited liability , investment in money rather than in land became the most convenient and popular form .
28 In particular Nation had long held a morbid fascination with the horrors of contemporary warfare : gas attack , chemical shelling and especially with the effects of nuclear weapons .
29 There could have been a similar reaction to the prospect of a Wilson administration and especially with the kind of rough-neck covert operations that were in progress in Ulster .
30 It was the pilgrimage which acquainted men with the distribution of spiritual treasure in the world ; and especially with the notion of the special value and sacredness of Jerusalem .
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