Example sentences of "[prep] be on [adj] term " in BNC.

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1 He quarrelled with Rousseau after being on intimate terms with him , but then everybody did .
2 A high proportion were repeat visitors who appeared to be on good terms with the reception and service staff .
3 The phrase conveys a sense of the desired relationship between elderly people and their relatives , especially their children : they want to be on good terms with them , and to have regular contact with them , but they do not want to rely on them too directly .
4 Macnab went on holiday to Berlin with a letter from Joyce to Christian Bauer , a contact whom they had made in London and who was said to be on good terms with Goebbels .
5 Despite the essential superficiality of much of this contact , the traditional empathy between the nations has assisted the Japanese to be on good terms with a regime whose political ideology is the antithesis of their own .
6 This immobility also makes it essential for him to be on good terms with his neighbours , as they are likely to be there , for better or worse , for most of his life .
7 It was said that Arkhina was among the most influential women of the Kha-Khan 's court , but she was too like her sister-in-law , his father 's wife , for him to be on good terms with her .
8 In one matter only had she determined to have her own way : she was going to be on good terms with the neighbours for the sake of her sanity .
9 He seemed to be on good terms with the people behind the bar .
10 Ulf , the bishop whose capabilities had so little impressed Bishop Ealdred , had disappeared from view and been replaced at Dorchester by a Saxon , Wulfwig , who was known to be on good terms with Leofric of Mercia .
11 It must have pleased the powerful church of Canterbury , with which he seems to have wished to be on good terms , and been gratifyingly displeasing to that of London .
12 I 'm not demanding we spend the entire weekend locked in a clinch , ’ Vitor said impatiently when she started to protest , ‘ but we should appear to be on good terms .
13 The accusation of soliciting was avoided , but she did appear to be on friendly terms with rather too many American and Canadian soldiers .
14 You ought to be on friendly terms .
15 ‘ It 's nice to be on friendly terms .
16 But it 's still best to be on friendly terms with your neighbours , is n't it ? ’
17 erm There 's always an ambivalence in the relationship between governors and schools in that , in order to have a good relationship with a head , you need to be on friendly terms with him so that the head , or her , so that the head will communicate with the governors .
18 He quickly came to be on close terms both with Edward himself , in whose Scottish wars he regularly served , and with his heir .
19 But with Virgin , he complained , the laid-back Sixties seediness and everybody wanting to be on first-name terms , all seemed like a ploy to lull an honest Situationist into a false sense of security .
20 And she had to confess , much as she hated to , that it felt nice to be on amicable terms with Jake .
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