Example sentences of "[verb] with [noun] on " in BNC.

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1 With the facility of computers it is possible , as shown by other unions as well as forward-looking branches of our own , to communicate with members on a personal basis .
2 It advocated action on housing and unemployment as a way in which Labour could begin to communicate with workers on both sides of the sectarian divide .
3 Ben saw the anger mixed with sadness on his father 's face .
4 Li Shai Tung stood before him , staring into his face , a faint smile of sadness mixed with satisfaction on his lips .
5 Now that they are giving it some serious work , they need a leader who can talk confidently to them and who can behave with authority on the world 's television screens .
6 Out of school , he read poetry and drew with chalks on the pavements of the East End .
7 So also Daniel , walking with Stephanie on Filey beach , had suddenly , out of some metaphorical experience as bodily as breathing , known why love was called " sweet " and , as his blood banged , why a beloved was a " sweet heart " .
8 Yet the hunter , walking with gun on arm , thoughts only of killing and murder in his mind and his intent clearly expressed in his body language , is shunned in fear by all creatures who can .
9 Here there was room to have a dig at ‘ trade unionists … too , screaming abuse and interfering with others on their way to work ’ , alleging that excitement on picket lines and at rock films amounted to the same thing : ‘ These are all manifestations of the primitive herd instinct . ’
10 The greater understanding of the behaviour of commuters and the long term trends are being synthesised with information on the policies of transport operators and central and local government so that the influence of policy , such as that in the 1980 Transport Act , on the long-term trends can be better understood .
11 The National Security Council , they insist , hums with meetings on just this , but the meetings can not get very far until more is known about how the post-war world looks .
12 Perhaps my most memorable day occurred with Paul on our ascent of Kichik Kumdan .
13 THE Essex boys celebrate with champagne on the balcony after clinching the championship at Chelmsford yesterday
14 Place quenelles of meringue on individual plates and decorate with custard on one side , fruit coulis on the other .
15 These are likely to meet with opposition on the grounds of spoiling favourite views .
16 The above prices include return travel from Dover and half board accommodation for 7 nights beginning with evening meal on day of arrival and ending with breakfast on day of departure from resort .
17 The above prices include return travel from Dover with 7 or 14 nights accommodation on a half board basis beginning with evening meal on day of arrival and ending with breakfast on day of departure .
18 The above 10 day prices include return travel from Dover for 7 or 14 nights in standard rooms on a half board basis beginning with evening meal on day of arrival and ending with breakfast on day of departure .
19 The above prices include return travel from Dover and accommodation for 7 or 14 nights in standard rooms on a half board basis beginning with evening meal on day of arrival and ending with breakfast on day of departure , except where * indicates bed and breakfast only in Prague .
20 Landing with obstructions on the upwind side is particularly dangerous and is just the sort of error people tend to make when they have n't flown for a while .
21 She was about to commiserate with Rose on her unfortunate circumstances when Rose proudly said , ‘ We 're ever so lucky to be'ere Sally-Anne , wiv the ‘ ole grarnd floor to ourselves — not like them upstairs what only ‘ ave one room . ’
22 After that , I 'm going to appear with Jack on the Today show in New York , and I have an offer to star in a new Tarzan movie . ’
23 Another example of the rich and regal possibilities which religion offered Cnut is provided by a visit which he made to Glastonbury on 30 November of a year which may have been 1032 , when William of Malmesbury says that he laid a cloak decorated with peacocks on the tomb of Edmund Ironside .
24 Destruction training starts with practice on a special upright board , called the practice board .
25 In his celebrated letter to Chesterfield , Samuel Johnson asks : ‘ Is not a Patron , My Lord , one who looks with unconcern on a Man struggling for Life in the water and when he has reached ground encumbers him with help . ’
26 The motives for seeking office are partly that the life of a backbench MP soon becomes unsatisfactory and offers so little scope for achievement , for registering even the smallest impact on a restricted area of.public life , that the average MP looks with envy on any minister who has a positive job to perform , however limited the field .
27 The sight of , say , a field of corn interspersed with poppies on a sunny day did n't move me ; the spectacle of a woman who had slipped and fallen in the street did n't move me — either to sympathy or to ridicule .
28 Even written patterns consist of figures relating to stitches and rows , interspersed with instructions on what to do with these and the knitting methods involved .
29 As well as continuing to work with companies on an individual basis work has commenced to develop a consortium programme involving major organisations from around the world .
30 They might be asked to work with teachers on developing materials .
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