Example sentences of "[vb past] [adv] [verb] [adv prt] with " in BNC.
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1 | And I got rather fed up with work last night actually cos there 's a load of drunken idiots and chatting me up . |
2 | Sexuality was a major political issue in the suffrage movement.During the years before the First War the history of sexual politics became intimately bound up with the progress of feminism . |
3 | Britain 's partners became so fed up with Margaret Thatcher 's strident opposition to economic and monetary union ( EMU ) and to political union that she was left utterly isolated at last October 's Rome summit . |
4 | Her husband , Michael became so bogged down with the worry of running their farm , he killed himself . |
5 | He got so fed up with it that he even tried a salmon shepherd 's pie to make it more interesting . |
6 | We got so fed up with the leaking roof that we decided to try and mend it with some tar . |
7 | Last week they got so fed up with commuters crowding round their screens to find out the train times — because the computer board was n't working — they just switched them all off . |
8 | His mother Alison , 34 , got so fed up with seeing her son in tears she kept him away from Penrhys Junior School in Rhondda , Mid Glamorgan . |
9 | What he could not understand , he said , was how this idea got so muddled up with hostages and the necessity to sell arms . |
10 | Before he invaded Iran in 1980 , Mr Hussein tried hard to get on with the Islamic zealots who had just seized power in Tehran . |
11 | So I think for this run I 'd better press on with the book . ’ |
12 | So when you showed us you did n't want to hear about your mother , we thought — well , we thought we 'd better go along with you . |
13 | And as for now , you 'd better go back with Fiona . |
14 | ‘ We 'd better carry on with our conversation a little later . |
15 | ‘ You 'd better hurry up with those exercises . ’ |
16 | And so , it does n't look good if I do n't bring the information in so I 'd better hurry up with that . |
17 | " We 'd better catch up with the others , had n't we ? " he said quickly , gesturing along the track . |
18 | I 'd better get on with my telephoning . |
19 | Any edge that gave me would not last for long , and if I was going to protect my client , if she was my client , I 'd better get on with it . |
20 | ‘ We 'd better get on with it if you 're going to be nasty , had n't we ? |
21 | ‘ Perhaps for the moment we 'd better get on with this search . ’ |
22 | ‘ Then I 'd better get on with running my own business . |
23 | ‘ Anyway , ’ he said , closing the book , ‘ I suppose I 'd better get on with my work now or I 'll get the sack . |
24 | ‘ Then you 'd better get on with the job quickly . ’ |
25 | ‘ Then we 'd better get on with it , ’ said Dorcas . |
26 | I have n't got time to plan it , I 'd better get on with it . |
27 | Er , and you start pressurising yourself all day , and it 's the old story , I have n't got time for planning , I 'd better get on with it . |
28 | You 'd better get on with it and do it now . |
29 | So I said no , so I 'd better get on with my cooking , so she said oh she said done it on pur colour co-ordinated , I 'm a bit more colour co-ordinated than that I was yesterday I had a |
30 | Well I 'd better get on with my berno binomial theorem then . |