Example sentences of "[adj] with [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Networx is venture-backed with funding from Vanguard Venture Partners and Paragon Venture Partners with a business plan that says it can be a $35m to $50m company .
2 If I could draw members attention to the supplementary papers erm and it 's page three which is the second report and it will become I will make it clear with regards to the er linking up of the two reports , both museums and Essex committee linked up to the museum registration .
3 The floor would be clear with crucks across the middle of most of the buildings supporting purlins and a ridge-piece .
4 His point of view is that of a beginner and he makes the pitfalls and their solutions quite clear with respect to this popular programming language .
5 Despite the fact that the Whitney Museum was the first to show the photographs of the notorious late Robert Mapplethorpe , and only recently declared that it was creating a department of photography , the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation announced last month that it was the Guggenheim it would be patronising with gifts in money and kind .
6 Where there is nothing to show that the parties have used language in any other than its strict and ordinary sense , and where the words interpreted in that sense are sensible with reference to extrinsic circumstances , it is an inflexible rule of construction that the words shall be interpreted in that strict and primary sense even though they may be capable of some popular or secondary interpretation and even though the most conclusive evidence of the intention to use them in such popular sense is tendered ( Enlayde Ltd v Roberts [ 1917 ] 1 Ch 109 : obligation to reinstate property destroyed by fire included an obligation to reinstate where the destruction was caused by incendiary bombs ) .
7 Overnight cultures of E coli on nutrient agar slopes were gently resuspended in phosphate buffered saline with D-mannose to a standard turbidity ( MacFarland 's no 9 ) .
8 ‘ Building societies are being approached almost daily with offers of this kind , ’ he claims .
9 Outside the boutiques were still aglow with heaps of motley flung about the feet of the disdainful assistants .
10 She would surprise him with a picnic , and packed a wicker basket , pedalling through the streets face aglow with anticipation at his surprise .
11 Lang has also played a part in the admission of rock and graffiti to the cultural fold and given a helping hand to the young unemployed with subsidies for their participation on archaeological digs .
12 There are a few well-rehearsed cases in which all the information provided by a text is not used to interpret it For example , people often fail to see what is wrong with asking of an air crash on a national frontier ‘ where were the survivors buried ? ’ or they fail to see why saying that a book ‘ fills a much-needed gap ’ is an insult to its author .
13 For one parent , for instance , it was public attitudes , in that ‘ people only see the disability ’ : ‘ That 's what 's wrong with society as a whole : they do n't see the person . ’
14 There 's nothing badly wrong with blokes like these -they
15 ‘ As I 've said there 's nothing wrong with money in itself .
16 He did n't approve of Celtic influence on what he called " the pure springs of Anglo-Saxon democracy " , holding that most of what had gone wrong with Britain over the past thousand years or so was the fault of " Celtic individualism " .
17 Well what 's wrong with footballer for a job ?
18 But what is wrong with change for the better and doing what one is good at ?
19 Was n't there something wrong with Russia at any time ?
20 What went wrong with Germany as a nation ?
21 What can go wrong with partnerships between colleges and industry ?
22 Whatever was wrong with Ken at that time , Andrew Ray is convinced it was n't sex .
23 It may well be there is nothing wrong with hops in this form except that I find that brewers who use them , such as Whitbread and Charles Wells , produce beers with a bitterness that is a shade too harsh for my liking .
24 Andrée appeared to have padded most of her edges ; she was being considerate , intelligent , serious , talking like an elder person generous with knowledge to a younger one , and Flavia ceased to feel an absurd adolescent and a target .
25 ( The city of Oxford in 1546 negotiated with Stumpe for a similar use of Osney Abbey , hoping to provide work for 2,000 people , but nothing came of this project . )
26 Alternatively , pairs of vertical timbers in holes in the ground clasped horizontal members with wattle and daub infilling , or the uprights were staggered with panels of inter-woven wattles between them .
27 The borders are a soft fusion of pink and blue with grey and purple foliage , and in a climate that explores most permutations of grey , she adds light with splashes of primrose
28 That was certainly the prevalent mood when England , confident of again sorting out the beleaguered Irish , and at least making the French work for the Five Nations Cup , took the field at Lansdowne Road with a side apparently brimful with Lions for New Zealand .
29 This lapse may be due to the lack of point counting in recent years , concomitant with lack of communication between various branches of the geological sciences .
30 Returning to Menard 's definition of science as ‘ the content of these [ scientific ] journals ’ , the scientific literature itself can be measured in a number of ways , and growth in literature is often considered to be concomitant with growth in the subject .
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