Example sentences of "[adv] [adj] [verb] [adv prt] with " in BNC.
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1 | Anne 's job involved shift work , six o'clock until two , two o'clock until ten , and ten o'clock until six in the morning so she was rarely free to go out with Sarah . |
2 | Because there was so little going on with the band I arranged to give myself a bit of a holiday . |
3 | She 's obviously prepared to put up with your terms . |
4 | ‘ Listen , I do n't know what you 're up to now , but let me make it quite clear that I 'm only prepared to put up with you for the sake of the station and my job . |
5 | Much easier to get along with . ’ |
6 | You know the old adage that , I mean one of the reasons is it 's so much easier to come up with a scandal , to come with a rats in the basement or something like that and intrigue people , than it is to come up with some , the positive angles . |
7 | Why do people seem to be so anti-gipsy to start out with ? |
8 | The key is not so much to end up with the right plan as to engage in strategic thinking . |
9 | And in a sense , he actually very neatly defined several different points without getting his knickers in a twist , and wearing different hats it would be so easy to come out with a muddled thing which would end up by being him feeling uncomfortable but him also being part of the Government and the Atomic Energy Authority . |
10 | You 're less likely to end up with gaps and assumptions . ’ |
11 | This is why so many businesses fail and , almost worse , why so many linger on with the craftsman under-rewarded and never developing his full potential . |
12 | Because , while being regressed , the patient is well aware of his or her present-day persona in addition to the previous one , Myra found it very distressing to think that she had been so happy to go along with all Hugh 's demands . |
13 | So ten start off with ten and cube it first . |
14 | He accepts it 's extremely difficult to come up with conclusive evidence that violent films cause violent behaviour , but that a series of studies in America 20 years ago suggested it was a factor . |
15 | You 'd be so nice to wake up with … |
16 | They are so keen to get on with it that they can be guaranteed to see the rabbit before any human and are fast off the mark . |
17 | This meant that people were no longer willing to put up with unsatisfactory Church officials ; laymen especially were developing a personal spirituality which gave them a new confidence and commitment to their faith and which also enabled them to form an independent view of theology and Church organisation ; they no longer had to rely on the educated establishment . |
18 | Overall what stands out from intercity comparisons such as these is that firstly , London 's difficulties are echoed elsewhere , which is comforting since it is generally easier to put up with a problem if you know that others share it . |
19 | According to Professor Thomis , it is " an area of agreement " that wages were generally unable to keep up with steeply rising food prices , while Mathias , pointing to rising money wages as a feature of the period , concludes that inflating prices generally outpaced them . |
20 | He 's just happy to get on with it . |
21 | When first seen at the homoeopathic clinic , he was just able to get around with one tripod . |
22 | It 's best just to put up with it . |
23 | Contestant , Fiona , says she 's just eager to get on with the game as soon as possible . |
24 | Contestant , Fiona , says she 's just eager to get on with the game as soon as possible . |
25 | The person in the centre who is most likely to link up with the systems verifier is the SCOTVEC co-ordinator . |
26 | Concrete must be used within four house of mixing , and it is usually easier to keep up with the latter type , which is laid as it is mixed . |
27 | Some candidates were unhappy about the selection process , claiming the region wanted someone more willing to fit in with the council 's corporate stance , than head a professional service . |
28 | Potentially the customer holds the strong cards at this stage of the discussion : the hotelier or restaurateur knows what his business problems are and knows what the computer system is going to have to achieve — and the potential buyer , who has thought this through before the supplier appears , is more likely to end up with the right system . |
29 | Most aphids can grow up either as a wingless stationary form or a winged migratory form ; they are more likely to grow up with wings if the local population density is high . |
30 | However , we believe that those who are determined to understand a phenomenon and to follow their research and their intuition wherever they may lead , are on the balance of probabilities , perhaps more likely to come up with new knowledge than those who are trying to solve a narrowly defined problem or to develop a product . |