Example sentences of "with [art] [noun sg] [pron] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 But Fen seemed quite happy , relaxing over his coffee which he kept replenishing from the large pot he had ordered , exchanging remarks with the landlord which revealed that he was a regular customer here .
2 ‘ Not with the landlord he 's got . ’
3 The best guarantors of quality are rigorous management , open government , access to information , customer participation , clear contracts with the public which have been pioneered by a number of Labour-controlled councils , and the public sector 's absolute determination to provide quality .
4 A private individual who buys a minority shareholding in a non-dividend paying private company as a pure portfolio investment must do so on the basis of some prospect which , if realised , will provide him with the return he seeks .
5 The looseness of the syntax was a familiar symptom enough , but coupled with the handwriting it took on a more sinister light , for the writing was one of those faint , regular , carefully-looped hands which indicate an underlying antipathy to the written word .
6 At an early stage the Roberts decided to do away with the lawn which sloped towards the house .
7 His background has been catalogued on many occasions and trawled by the man himself with the single-mindedness which characterizes all his causes .
8 The wind was still banging away , but there was an inner calm that was at variance with the agitation I had felt below .
9 Hannah 's mother as a teenager with the lady who looked after her
10 I said well we had I said I had a bit of a run in with the lady who ran it , I did n't agree that he should be compelled to do singing which she thought he should I said and we had a decided it cos he .
11 No I quite agree , I also agree with the lady who said that one of the important things is that you like the person , I well speaking from experience , I started out liking somebody
12 Not the one who wanted , for goodness sake , to have a different matching shopping trolly for her different outfits But how much I agree with the lady who wanted the cost of High Street Christmas lights spent on something more practical .
13 If you 're vaguely interested I can arrange an interview with the lady I spoke to on their resettlement team , but if you do n't like the sound of it … ’
14 In this controlled clinical trial , presumably it is important to test drugs on patients themselves and presumably the important feature , as you mentioned , is that they are volunteers , rather than people who are buying it , the medicines , in good faith with the expectation they 've already been tested ?
15 Thankfully the arrival of the waiter with their main course gave her time to treat his unwarranted reaction with the disdain it deserved .
16 Those who knew him best saw the melancholy that went hand-in-hand with the gaiety he showed the world , and because he lived every emotion intensely , his misery went deep .
17 The gentleman with the white waistcoat was standing at the gate with his hands behind him after having delivered himself having witnessed with the donkey he smiled rejoicedly when that the door , he saw at once it was Mr Mr smiled as he pursued the I am said the gentleman in the white waistcoat
18 What prompted her father to go out with the hand-cart she did n't know , because underneath it all he was a proud man .
19 I liked everything about it , I liked everything about it , mind you I had sore fingers to begin with , very sore , with the filing you see , but also er I was used to thing in a way because there was a little lock shop in mother 's yard er and erm home-made er home-made locks and he used to er and now he used to do them and stamp them and I us I worked his hand press for him before I was fourteen and they were for and they are still and my mother used to take them to Birmingham and erm I think he used to give me sixpence for doing everything I did for him .
20 Hayling was also in charge of media initiatives , so Lowe naturally turned to him with the newspaper they had so often discussed as comrades in Big Flame .
21 The driver and friend tinkered with the engine which had burst into flames twice , and been push-started once by the passengers .
22 In this uninterrupted narrative of rowdyism and mischief running through the writings of these Christian youth workers in the 1920s and 1930s , it is not only the behaviour itself that is difficult to reconcile with the nostalgia which has come to settle around postwar perceptions of pre-war social realities .
23 Anonymity is not used to neutralize the moral responsibility respondents would otherwise have for their actions and opinions , but is our attempt to keep faith with the trust we earned .
24 He has natural flair which gives him the ability to do anything with the ball he wants to .
25 I believe those murders had something to do with the race I rode for you . ’
26 This is a cultural fact , the obsession with the past which has marked European civilization more and more strongly since the romantic era .
27 This breaking-down of the time barrier could be extremely exciting ; at the same time , the very idea introduces so many paradoxes ( if you communicate with the past you change it ; you therefore change the present ; therefore , in this new present , you never communicated with the past ) that we must think it unlikely that people will ever be able to use tachyons in this way … unless communications were flitting between alternate universes , the existence of which would imply the simultaneous reality of all possibilities .
28 On contact with the chemoattractant they form oxygen free radical species and there is release of lysosomal enzymes after phagocytosis .
29 So Mr Gates is trying to work out how his rising pile of information can best be combined with the expertise he does have , in software .
30 In an interview with the press he seemed prepared to allow the employers time to see the logic of the situation but added a threat of sanctions to come .
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