Example sentences of "with [pron] [noun pl] of " in BNC.
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1 | I thanked him and left , taking with me copies of the statements in the Southwark Bridge case file . |
2 | These people often carried with them memories of his politeness and fairness . |
3 | To investigate with them ways of development education being increasingly central to their agenda , for example with bible colleges , presbyterian links and with main centres . |
4 | In addition to first degree courses there is a wide range of undergraduate courses leading to higher diplomas , diplomas and certificates , of which a large number carry with them awards of national bodies such as the Business & Technician Education Council ( BTEC ) . |
5 | A visitor to Mohenjo Daro , one of the Indus Valley sites , will be left with the impression that this city with all it contained had either in record time surpassed all other human generations in inventiveness , or that like the Aryans they were immigrants bringing with them centuries of cultural inheritance . |
6 | Let me leave you there for the moment with my views of high morale as I saw it , and I saw a great deal of it during my constant circuit within the Command . |
7 | I suppose that 'd be right , with my bits of change . |
8 | How sorry I felt for them as I stood with my images of a future of crackling kindling and bringing the pine logs hither and other rustic carry-ons . |
9 | I was able to identify four problem areas , namely training , various restrictions to my practice , other nurses being unfamiliar with my parameters of practice , and unrealistic expectations of both medical and nursing staff . |
10 | While the nursing staff had been keenly following the implementation of the ENP , some of them did not seem to be familiar with my parameters of practice — I sometimes missed patients that I could have treated because they were not being filtered through to me . |
11 | It is marked by the crossing of a distinct threshold in the complexity and realism with which systems of interest are modelled , an abandoning of the simplify-and-idealize tenets of theoretical science in favour of a much richer ( though , to some , less pristinely elegant ) framework . |
12 | In view of the slowness with which changes of mental outlook came about in those days , it is not surprising that even after the introduction of the mechanical clock in the fourteenth century most people , including many of the more sophisticated , were far less concerned in their daily life with the passage of time than we are . |
13 | One of the more remarkable features of the British energy scene has been the speed with which forecasts of demand have fallen , and the CEGB 's new forecasts are the lowest yet to come from an official source . |
14 | The main problems of criterion-referencing relate to the accuracy with which descriptions of performance can be made , and the possible effects on curriculum . |
15 | The incident , trivial in itself , of 20 November 1946 , culminated three days later in a terrible bombardment of Haiphong which was a prelude to pitched battles in Tonkin between the Vietminh forces and the French ; and although the usually quoted figure of 6,000 Vietnamese dead in Haiphong may be too high , the ease with which casualties of this order could be inflicted , with a French cruiser joining in at close range , suggested misleadingly that when French forces were fully engaged it would be such a one-sided contest that the Vietminh would learn the appropriate lesson . |
16 | The tendency is for English language based thinking to see things on a grey scale because of the relative ease with which nuances of meaning can be expressed . |
17 | Each unit in some population can be allocated uniquely to one of the cells so giving , providing that we count the number of units in each cell , the frequency with which combinations of the relevant properties occur . |
18 | Action : Check in Appendix B for which module relations can be used with which types of module . |
19 | A main feature of this tool is the ease with which levels of information can be incorporated into the document and unfolded if desired ( Figure 4 ) . |
20 | Unknown to many primitive societies , it provides a lightning-conductor for envy , as may be seen from the readiness with which gains of pure chance are left outside an otherwise highly egalitarian ( ‘ envious ’ ) system of taxation . |
21 | The limiting factor in terms of future developments is not technology itself but the creative insight with which applications of technology are developed and a sensitivity towards the needs and concerns of the individuals affected . |
22 | ‘ The fact that it has some kind of playful relationship with Birmingham is something with which readers of my novels can easily cope . |
23 | Despite this caveat , however , the frequency with which images of health , construction and " the growth of the new man " in the Soviet Union are contrasted with images of sickness , decay and decline in the capitalist West is itself a telling statement on the intellectual climate of the time . |
24 | Mrs Marcos — improbably described by her lawyer as ‘ a small , fragile woman ’ — is accused of fraud in connection with her purchases of property in New York . |
25 | I was not alone in the way I identified with the saga of the March family , nor was I alone in identifying with Jo ( and presumably all readers do ) in her hurts and disappointments , her longings for femininity that clashed with her dreams of independence and achievement ; and in wishing for the ultimate fairness of all things as they were shaped by those nineteenth century moral certainties . |
26 | Arriving at the School with Jasper and Bienvida in a borrowed beat-up Ford van , its roofrack loaded with launderette bags of clothes and its inside with her sticks of furniture ( sticks was the word ) , she told him the advertisement would only attract riff-raff . |
27 | The research reported by John Ermisch in chapter 4 has shown that a woman 's earning power is positively associated with her chances of both divorce and remarriage . |
28 | She had often tired him with her chatter , with her bursts of personal revelations , ‘ Today I feel this — yesterday I felt that , ’ but suddenly he wished she would talk to him . |
29 | The bearer of bad tidings fumbled with her layers of damp shawls and Dot felt fear on all sides till she was suffocated , as though lying beneath collapsed building rubble . |
30 | Lovebite would surrender joyously to the buckles of delight , and Little Liz would wake south London with her cries of consent , but where is the fun in that ? |