Example sentences of "with it [art] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Whilst for some the experience of ageing does bring with it a degree of social disengagement , it is far from being a ‘ natural ’ or inevitable event . |
2 | Being sick can bring with it a degree of sympathy and attention that is greatly valued by more isolated individuals , and they may believe that if their health improves they will lose out on the time and attention that is given to them on the basis of their illness . |
3 | 1990 is ‘ Visit Malaysia Year ’ which brings with it a year of festivals and celebrations . |
4 | The file brought with it a twinge of now familiar guilt ant a covering note from Army Intelligence : Will you please try and persuade the creepy-crawlies that we have neither the facilities nor any reason to investigate this lady 's apparent disappearance . |
5 | It is never easy to come to terms with death — it brings with it a surfeit of emotions ; disbelief , anger , guilt , resentment and remorse . |
6 | A bus passed them , bringing with it a flurry of dry dust from the gutter . |
7 | Age and income are strongly related in almost all samples , and the Social Attitudes Survey is no exception , as figure 13.3 shows ; the exact age of the earnings high point varies , but for almost everyone old age brings with it a diminution of income . |
8 | Only four months previously the land had suddenly plummeted into the straits , taking with it a village of some eighty souls . |
9 | Night came , and with it a respite in the fighting . |
10 | Apart from the blow to one 's pride , the drastic loss of earning brings with it a sense of utter helplessness . |
11 | As this suggests , the appeal of such a tune could be seen as a ‘ leftover ’ , an ‘ echo ’ of a bygone era of craftsmanship ; and Adorno recognizes the possibility of this — indeed , he acknowledges that it is precisely in popular music that the category of the ‘ idea ’ ( a relatively independent , memorable element within a totality , a phenomenon more or less abandoned by ‘ serious ’ music ) lives on , and with it a sense of creative spontaneity ( Adorno 1976 : 34–7 ) . |
12 | But this greater specificity carries with it a price in terms of relevance and verifiability . |
13 | Maturity brings new perspectives and the idea that they are often manipulated for their sporting prowess brings with it a clarity of perception , a perception succinctly summarized by Birchfield 's sprinter Lincoln Asquith : ‘ I was used by school teachers 'cause I was good at sport . |
14 | This would carry with it a responsibility on their part to help devise the tests , or at least to scrutinize their content . |
15 | It was an image that spread and took root everywhere , bringing with it a tradition of atrocious performances — sloppy , flat and prettifying — that lasted throughout his lifetime , for the entire 19th century and for too much of the 20th . |
16 | In this context new kinds of employment ( eg public and private services ) have come to the fore and with it a rise in the proportion of female workers . |
17 | The critical approach to knowledge brings with it a state of intellectual freedom , in which the individual is freed from unquestioning faith in any view of the world . |
18 | In the history of the sciences in France , as in German critical theory , it is a matter at bottom of examining a reason , the autonomy of whose structures carries with it a history of dogmatism and despotism — a reason , consequently , which can only have an effect of emancipation on condition that it manages to liberate itself from itself . |
19 | But I did get away with it a couple of times on this record . |
20 | She is no longer young , thought Fergus , and pity stirred in him , and with it a thread of forgiveness . |
21 | The New Year came and with it a kind of hope , though of what Penelope was not sure . |
22 | The very optimism of the possibility that the miners might be on the move against the government carried with it a premonition of pessimism , that the miners would save the working class when it could not save itself . |
23 | Rindi , whose crew possessed only pressurized paraffin-lamps , asked to borrow our torch , and revealed with it a patch of silt floor a good thirty feet further down , as untrammelled as the bottom of the deep ocean trenches — except for the unmistakable tyre-tracks of several large pythons . |
24 | Such a given behaviour ( innate is the conventional term , but I prefer to avoid it if possible , for it carries along with it a load of redundant ideological baggage ) ensures that appropriate responses are made to particular stimuli without the need for trial-and-error learning , but at the expense of limits to both the range and the flexibility of the response . |
25 | Trust status brings with it a cloud of secrecy . |
26 | Besides , with GEMU , which no East German politician dare oppose , East Germany will already have yielded its monetary sovereignty to the West German Bundesbank and with it a lot of its room for political manoeuvre . |
27 | It 's carrying with it a lot of soil , bits of rock , |
28 | If this new period brought with it a phase of Spenglerian pessimism after the long years of Victorian optimism , Toynbee did not himself assume that the West was in decline as such , but rather that paradoxically the globalization of Western civilization was being accompanied by a self-consciousness of its own cultural relativization , a process to which Toynbee 's own equally totalizing and relativizing history was designed to contribute . |
29 | For some strange reason the image of the corpse of Nicola Sharpe floated up in his mind , and it brought with it a breath of foreboding , a sense that he was in the presence of evil . |
30 | Silence , and with it a circle of bewildering calm , closed about them . |