Example sentences of "[vb -s] with [det] " in BNC.
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1 | There were other similarities in character which could be applied then and later in that Dupea was to be portrayed , in many ways , as the bastard who walks out of his family and a pregnant girlfriend , refuses to tell the girl he lives with that he loves her or to play the role of a caring son . |
2 | but he lives with this he does n't really make time for anything . |
3 | Life clangs and swings and scrapes with all these buckets and pails . |
4 | The answer to the question lies with that strange emotion which we call ‘ love ’ . |
5 | I think that the real way to improve the health of the capital city 's people lies with such old-fashioned concepts as full employment , decent housing and good education . |
6 | And no doubt , the answer lies with both . |
7 | But the normally accepted context of human error lies with those people directly concerned with the operation of aircraft including refuelling crews , aircraft loaders , flight operations personnel and air traffic controllers as well as the flight crews themselves and , most particularly , the pilots . |
8 | I believe the way ahead lies with more free enterprise . |
9 | Then at the end of the century Britain , fearing for her own security in the trans-Pacific sea-lanes , swapped rights to Tongan waters with those she had in Samoa , giving Samoan trading rights to Germany and the United States , and keeping Tonga 's for the Empire . |
10 | This may take several hours during which she will lay small groups of eggs , which the male fertilises and covers with more bubbles . |
11 | weakens with each wash of dark |
12 | Despite the initial shock of being confronted with a typical Elizabethan letter or manuscript , the collector may be assured that , once he has troubled to master the unfamiliar forms of a number of the letters , their consistency will ensure that he will have no more — and sometimes less — trouble than he has with some of the missives that find their way to his desk or doormat today . |
13 | For the first time , too , he writes with some bitterness about the customs of William I and Lanfranc which he had hitherto accepted without demur : |
14 | On receipt of Gaskell 's temperance rhymes , he wrote : ‘ I have read your temperance rhymes with much pleasure and can not but think that they must do good ’ ( 1840 ) . |
15 | Since each baboon interacts with many others , and since there may be a long delay between action and reciprocation , stability requires that a baboon should recognise individuals , and remember how each has behaved , or , at the very least , associate with each individual a positive or negative sign , depending on how it has behaved . |
16 | Such an ideal does not stand isolated from the practices which strive towards it but interacts with those practices , helps to construct them , and is in turn constructed by them . |
17 | All languages also have some kind of rhythmical or accentual structure , and again intonation interacts with this structure in different ways in different cases . |
18 | Even receptors not usually coupled to phospholipase C may thus interact through G protein βγ subunits with this effector enzyme under certain circumstances , for example in cells expressing PLCs highly sensitive to βγ stimulation such as PLC- β2 . |
19 | In that horrid state , the mind may be considered as a city without walls , open to every insult , and paying homage to every invader ; every idea that then starts with any force , becomes a reality ; and the reason , over fatigued with its former importunities , makes no head against the tyrannical invasion , but submits to it from mere imbecility . |
20 | This deliberately starts with some very simple models , which are then elaborated step-by-step . |
21 | It all starts with some balls bouncing onto the screen , and after some text the group members are introduced . |
22 | The historian starts with some knowledge or facts ( a ) , adds opinion , interpretations , judgements , ( b ) and ( c ) and presents them in a logical and relevant essay ( d ) . |
23 | The principal way in which the behaviour has been elucidated is by numerical solutions of the equations ; one starts with some initial condition for ( X , Y , Z ) and integrates forward in t . |
24 | The description of jubilee starts with these words : ‘ The land shall not be sold for ever : for the land is mine ’ ( Lev . |
25 | The dearth was of persons who could give the only kind of witness that counts with those looking for help , the kind that is couched in the first person singular ’ ( Trueblood 1961:51 ) . |
26 | She could recall his hard masculine looks with such clarity of detail that she did n't think that she would have any problem in recreating the image on paper . |
27 | Look how he juggles with all that fruit . |
28 | She traces the roots back in time ; she covers some of the more obvious ground ( with chapters on Happy Mondays , the Stone Roses etc ) ; she rights some wrongs ; she flirts with some myths ; she gives a platform to some of the previously unsung instigators ; she dumps a few reputations ; and , though imperfect , it 's as reliable a guide to current Manchester music as you are likely to get . |
29 | There 's no better inspiration for shrugging off slothfulness than Glen Shiel , which rewards with such a high score of tops and something worthwhile to brag about to those who spent Saturday and Sunday vacuuming the car with a cordless hoover . |
30 | Then a division can trade as much as it wants with that market at the market price . |