Example sentences of "[adv] with [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Lord Grubb was an ancient hereditary peer who kept up eagerly with the times and was trying at the moment to unlock his capital to set up a chain of waffle shops .
2 Therefore absolute trust , which we placed eagerly with the likes of Clarkie and as a result had our faces rubbed in the dirt , can not reasonably be expected .
3 The eggs hatch synchronously with the emergence of the wasp larvae , and the namatode larvae infect young female fig wasps before they disperse .
4 She was certain his faith would be infectious ; that , like maternal love being born fiercely with the baby , her belief would spring to life with marriage .
5 The complicated nature of this debate is also shown by the fact that analysis of General Household Survey data for 1974 by Klein and Collins reached results which disagree somewhat with the findings reported so far .
6 It contrasts somewhat with the wishes of John Patten , education secretary for England and Wales , who wrote last year : ‘ Dwindling belief in redemption and damnation has led to loss of fear of the eternal consequences of goodness and badness . ’
7 The prospects of the party improved somewhat with the adoption at the 1937 conference of an ‘ Immediate Programme ’ of nationalisation for a single term of office : this included all the major measures of the post-war Labour government except for iron and steel , which in any case was not to be fundamentally reorganised before the Labour government left office in 1951 .
8 ‘ The full terms and conditions upon which the report is prepared are set out opposite with the scale of fees charged shown separately .
9 Working the paint thickly with a knife I tried to create a jarring effect with colour and texture conveying the power and pain of the experience .
10 Roll out the bread lightly with a rolling pin after cutting off the crusts and spread thickly with the cheese filling .
11 Furthermore with a text recognition system , as the lexicon gets larger the problems increase .
12 ( Furthermore with the LISP system available to the current project it was not possible to store a very large lexicon — necessitating morphological processing to reduce storage .
13 Music treat : The trustees of Sir William Turner 's Hospital at Kirkleatham , near Redcar , have organised a short season of concerts to mark the 300th anniversary of the local knight starting tomorrow at 2pm with a performance by Marske Band .
14 Memories began to roll , like a film you 'd forgotten but remembered better with every frame .
15 Most do better with a 3-wood off the tee because the extra loft gives confidence and is more sympathetic to an indifferent strike .
16 Feeling unable to see just then how Cara , even with her journalistic experience , would have fared better with a man who , somehow without you noticing , turned every question or countered it with one of his own , Fabia resolved , as Lubor Ondrus turned into a driveway and steered the Skoda uphill , to do better .
17 ‘ I reckon , though , that James and I would probably do better with a dose of that injection you 've just given Sandy . ’
18 ‘ Perhaps she 'd do better with a cat or a dog . ’
19 You know , women with only one tit , they cut the other off so they could shoot better with a bow and arrow , they live together , all women and no men , this woman 's written a play about them — ’
20 Well they found they could do it far better with a tractor and a mower .
21 He had that high-coloured English complexion , which looks so much better with a suntan .
22 And Doherty , who worked tirelessly , might have done better with a John Easton cross , his header going over the top .
23 I do n't know any advanced skiers who ski better with a brace than before their injury , so do n't push your luck .
24 I am getting thrown a little more , but I feel stronger and better with a lot more aggression . ’
25 We seem to be able to communicate better with a horse if no one else is around .
26 COMEDIANS are supposed to work better with an audience .
27 That comedians work better with an audience is also one of the more convincing justifications for democracy .
28 It may be that long experience of minorities encouraged them to feel that they could cope better with an absentee ruler than one who upset the balance of power at home .
29 Indeed , in another passage in the Ali differentiates the haric elli ( and 40-akce ) and dahil grades of medreses on the basis not of geographical location but of their builders — the 40-akce and medreses being the foundations of the families of pre-Ottoman rulers and [ Ottoman ] vezirs and emirs , the medreses the foundations of the families of Ottoman sultans — method of classification which accords rather better with the actualities of his time ( late sixteenth century ) but which provides no apparent explanation for the terms themselves .
30 A different but related approach was that of Meyer ( 1975 ) , who considered the knowledge structure of texts , and produced a type of grammar which would cope better with the variety of types of organisation and structure found in textbooks .
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