Example sentences of "with [pron] [noun] that [pron] " in BNC.

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1 I was so excited with my discovery that I did not get much sleep that night .
2 Nick was so thrilled with my caddying that he told everyone on television in an interview that ‘ Andy Prodger has been great .
3 To my eyes it looks like the pattern , though I know with my head that it 's the background .
4 Mr Pumblechook seemed to agree with my sister that I should be punished as much as possible , even when eating , and so for breakfast next morning he gave me a large piece of bread with very little butter , and a cup of warm water with very little milk , and insisted on checking my learning .
5 I have to agree with my good-sister that it was exceptional . ’
6 It was not with my reason that I had fallen in love with him and come to live with him , but it was with my reason that I was going to leave him .
7 It was not with my reason that I had fallen in love with him and come to live with him , but it was with my reason that I was going to leave him .
8 Early in my first tour I argued with my colleagues that I doubted it would be possible to ditch a Wimpy or a Whitley on water , particularly if there was a heavy swell .
9 Either way , the word seems to suggest that it was their inability or refusal to suckle which was regarded as characteristic — a supposition exactly in line with my theory that they represent the masculine , aggressive , weaning mothers of early agriculture .
10 But it ties in with my earlier discussion of ethology and my original Cartesian Figure 3.1 , and with my assertion that we have a psychological need to perceive ourselves as normal and ell regulated .
11 Erm first of all if I may just er point out that the example I put with my paper that I have submitted today , and I thank you for the er indulgence in allowing me to produce it so late , was simply that there was one particular appeal of decision where an inspector remarked particularly on the lack of a local or a development plan policy relating to generally relating to the countryside .
12 She opened her mouth and was ready with her invitation that they dine at her hotel , but as the thought that winged in from nowhere that Ven was probably hitting the high spots in Prague that night — and with some lovely Czech lady in tow , she would n't wonder — Fabia , with not the least idea of what a koliba was , promptly did a switch .
13 And with that she turned on him herself and raising up her wings struck him such a blow with her talons that he rolled back out of control in the air , the tops of the pine trees below spinning before his eyes .
14 She checked with her uncle that he would keep them in horse-feed , and he agreed , amused at her presumption .
15 She went with Breeze to call upon Mrs Rossitter , who was so charmed with her voice that she engaged her on the spot to read to her for two hours every day .
16 ‘ At the end of the day , I 'm not satisfied either with her evidence or with her claim that she had no belief that copyright would be infringed , ’ he said .
17 She stood dreaming , trying to imagine what it must be like to walk up the aisle to the side of a man who was waiting to marry you , and so enthralled was she with her imaginings that she never heard him .
18 Pat smiled , lowered her arms , and then stood looking at Alice , without smiling , saying with her body that she had had enough of Alice , and wanted to go .
19 She held it on her finger and sang to it and made little kissing noises with her lips that he tried to imitate .
20 And so , although Laura would have liked to put her university degree to some good use , she had been so madly in love with her husband that she had willingly bowed to his wishes .
21 A hostess in tight teeshirt and jeans lingers only long enough to assure Kate discreetly with her eyes that she is not poaching on her territory , smiles velvetly at Jeremy , brings them their drinks .
22 The frustration of what she could only identify as love for him , plus the fact that she 'd given herself to him so completely , mixed with her suspicion that he was still using her in some way to further his own undisclosed purposes , had engendered a turmoil of emotions within her , among which , she was ashamed and horrified to realise , lurked a certain impulse to exercise violence on his person .
23 She telephoned him at lunchtime on Monday , and he seemed happy with her suggestion that they meet the following day .
24 The end of Roman Carlisle is inextricably wedded to the account of St Cuthbert 's visit , with its implication that there was still a fortified urban community in existence , headed by a praepositus civitatis ( an echo from Lincoln ? ) and with a still functioning aqueduct , towards the end of the seventh century .
25 A wife can be busy bunging up a family and so taken up with their affairs that she fails to give her husband real attention .
26 Along the new streets came new housing , the apartment buildings which are so closely identified with their originator that they are stylistically described simply as ‘ Haussmann ’ .
27 There are times when parents get so angry with their children that they are in danger of losing their self-control .
28 You see people having a relationship with their children that they ca n't have any other way .
29 Everyone planning to start a baby should check with their doctor that they are still protected against German Measles .
30 In one article Whitty declared that , ‘ There is … a fair amount of prima facie evidence that the success of the political education movement in mobilising support from politicians is associated with their belief that it could assist in preserving the status quo and in bolstering respect for it . ’
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