Example sentences of "with [noun] to " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | She got it shut , and leaning with difficulty to the jolting bowl , she vomited colourless fluids from her empty stomach . |
2 | On the other hand , beagles , taught with difficulty to ‘ smoke ’ , appeared to suffer no ill effects to the lungs . |
3 | Jinkwa turned with horror to the General . |
4 | ULSTER pensioners have reacted with horror to Government proposals to pay pensions directly into bank accounts . |
5 | Base pair C7.G10' , with contacts to Lys23 . |
6 | We must have covered just about everything over those four days , from carrying boxes and travelling with birds to ferreting to keep them fed . |
7 | He was Labour 's campaigns director for the 1987 general election , readily embracing the new red rose image , and was rewarded with election to the ruling National Executive . |
8 | The picture in Grampian region is even more pronounced with exports to the European Community accounting for 65% , and those to EFTA accounting for more than 10% of the total , giving a total for Western Europe of 75% . |
9 | This year 's results tend to reinforce that view with exports to the former Eastern bloc remaining of limited significance at £82 million or less than 1% of the total . |
10 | The English liberals studied their seventeenth-century predecessors with great attention — Wordsworth frequently refers with enthusiasm to Milton and Algernon Sidney — but for them the land of the free was on the other side of the Atlantic . |
11 | It will be a vision of success from which everyone profits , a vision which the Profitboss has developed over many years , a vision in which he passionately believes and is able to communicate with enthusiasm to his team and every other employee in the organization . |
12 | In 1992 , we responded with enthusiasm to the theme of the Earth Summit : that our way of life here in Wales , as elsewhere across the World , must change if it is to become genuinely environmentally sustainable . |
13 | Although this certainly coincided with attempts to breakdown the work process , matters were bound to be more complicated in such an unequivocally skilled trade . |
14 | It thus concerns itself solely with attempts to systematically evaluate the impact of an action , where the choice of action has been informed by reading . |
15 | 1932 was a momentous year in Chiswick , which had found itself almost isolated and unable to expand due to the River Thames cutting it off from the County of Surrey , and the boundary of Hammersmith to the east , being also the boundary with the London County Council ; with little or no contact or matters of interest with Acton to the north , but nevertheless a narrow link with Brentford , to the west ( Chiswick High Road had been called the Brentford Road for very many years ) , which link was considerably enhanced by the construction of the Great West Road . |
16 | Sub-set variable is listed numerically after the base part , with cross-reference to the parent assembly/s . |
17 | She stood in the doorway , taking in the lofty whitewashed space with match-boarding to shoulder height and saddle racks full of Stubens and Passats , all clean . |
18 | There has been a feeling that they would compromise with Chelsea to the extent of accepting half the £22.85 million valuation . |
19 | For example , if you fit SII wings and front panel with headlamps to a SIII , the lights would not meet legal requirements . |
20 | The term ‘ blindsight ’ was coined by Larry Weiskrantz at Oxford to describe perhaps the best known example of this dissociation , in which patients with damage to the visual areas of the cortex deny being able to see a visual stimulus while behaving in some respects as if they are processing it , for instance by moving their eyes in its direction . |
21 | A male patient with damage to this region was unable to recognize his wife or other members of his family by sight : this was not the result of a generalized loss of the ability to recognize people , because he had no difficulty in recognizing them by their voices . |
22 | SEVERE drought coupled with damage to the ozone layer is likely to threaten crop growth in Britain , scientists fear . |
23 | Numbers of half mandibles that are either complete , or with damage to their ascending rami . |
24 | A small proportion of babies born with toxoplasmosis ( 1 in 10 ) will be severely affected with damage to the brain and eyes . |
25 | Connolly gave himself up to the police and was charged with damage to the cell amounting to ten shillings . |
26 | According to Cowey ( 1982 ) and Humphreys and Riddoch ( 1987 ) humans with damage to the temporal visual cortex , or the prestriate areas that feed into it , also suffer major impairments in object recognition , known as ‘ agnosias ’ . |
27 | PATIENTS with damage to the striate cortex have a subjectively blind region of the visual field , but may still be able to detect and localize targets within this region . |
28 | On a tactual version of the Formboard Test , in which wooden forms have to be fitted into spaces of the same outline shape , patients with right posterior damage were found to be much slower than those with damage to the left hemisphere ( De Renzi , Faglioni and Scotti , 1968 ) . |
29 | Among patients with damage to the left hemisphere those with left handers in their immediate family were superior on a number of written , verbal tasks . |
30 | Advice on any legal problem which arises in connection with the journey or holiday or with damage to your home . |