Example sentences of "they [vb mod] [verb] with [pron] " in BNC.

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1 One of these effects can be what Britton ( 1981 ) refers to as the phenomenon of re-enactment as an unwitting professional response to the dynamics of a child 's situation , the difficulty that exists for professionals not to re-enact — and thereby aggravate — what the child already experiences , and the ease with which they may collude with his sense of hopelessness and negative feelings .
2 You might also consider whether they ought to continue with their attempt to run a second restaurant at all .
3 What seems to have happened is that they have internalised the negative images that are attributed to black people and do not feel that they should identify with them .
4 Monboddo led them in , saying that since he was dressed like a farmer , they should have with him a farmer 's family dinner .
5 At the first meeting of the committee which I attended the secretary announced that it would be necessary for members to disclose their interests , meaning thereby that they should declare with what companies and organisations they were involved .
6 For these reasons alone many surveyors decide not to send letters in advance and rely on the interviewers ' skills in being able to explain to people on their doorsteps what the survey is about and why they should help with it .
7 However , the physician which has been more than happy to dish out expensive advice to clients on how they they should deal with their own ills , has been unable to heal itself .
8 How he had intended that they should live with her for a while , and how his mother had a grudge against Bridget , and the terrible row they had had the previous night , and how they did n't know where they were going to live .
9 And then then they 'll compare with you .
10 We 'll get it cut off and put in the bin , that 's what they 'll do with it .
11 Your party , your other , never mind , and when that happens you get poaching and I 've always said , if you treat your membership properly they 'll stay with you , but you 've also got to remember that the union is in dire financial straits , or so it tells us .
12 They 'll vote with their feet .
13 They 'll play with it for two or three years yet , and in the end very probably nothing will come of it .
14 Karen King — because she was English , Jessica insisted — had given over even thinking about them , let alone imagining what they might do with their hard , lean bodies and their tired , rope-burned hands , had given over bothering to deny she 'd had such fantasies .
15 Two tall young men in finely cut gallibayas and white scarves asked rather formally if they might walk with us , then lapsed into shy silence .
16 This revolutionary conclusion , which is perhaps the most important for the general reader of The Origin , is one easily supported by modern anthropologists although they might disagree with him about what exactly will happen when the change comes or even whether this kind of change can be predicted .
17 Many parliamentarians would also congratulate him , however strongly they might disagree with him .
18 Other passengers were queueing at the check-point , most of them looking back as if that glimpse was all they could carry with them to their destinations .
19 I rang around and a friend , Roger Gerrett , said they could stay with him until it was safe to return . ’
20 Saying a picture of somebody crying would make somebody gloomy is prescriptive. it could be just what a person needs to see because they would not feel alone , they could identify with it .
21 I admit it sounds like a lot ; but that 's because everybody thinks of what they could do with it if it ended up in their bank account .
22 It was therefore important for him to be well informed about events in his own country and in the political world generally ; and ambassadors sometimes asked in their despatches for news which they could trade with their colleagues from other states since , as one of them told the French foreign minister in 1674 , " You know that in [ diplomacy ] as in other ordinary transactions it is necessary to give in order to receive " .
23 Er at the same time I 'm looking for the chemistry er the feel for those people , er the quality of those people and whether I could work with them and whether they could work with me .
24 Knowingly , they gave up their stipends , homes and churches so that they could live with their consciences .
25 Mr McGlynn interpreted the confrontation as follows : ‘ I believe that it was a test by the company to see how far they could get with us .
26 We introduced ourselves and told them we had brought them some food which they could share with their friends .
27 Sometimes they 'd stand with you while you were doing .
28 We usually got one back saying they 'd been accepted and they 'd deal with them at a certain time you know .
29 I do n't think they 'd deal with anybody that dodgy .
30 And then they used to go with their slate and and they knew it altogether and then the counter turns and turns like that .
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