Example sentences of "[be] able [verb] [adv prt] with " in BNC.

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1 When you have understood the gist of this and talked to your inner teacher about what you need as an individual , you will be able to sit down with paper and write your own script .
2 She was nearly sixteen ; if she refused to go and told her mother so herself , Anna , they reckoned , would not be able to go through with it .
3 Chris had written a letter to Tina Jelly in Aldershot saying that he still loved her and missed her a lot , but was sure that until he came home she would be able to go out with his mates from the Royal Signals .
4 And anyway if they were super models who would be able to go out with one so sad .
5 She … she wanted to provide me with something to be able to go off with Emma where he could n't get at her .
6 Business travellers could use the morning and early evening flights to the City Airport in London 's Docklands , while holidaymakers would be able to link up with international flights , particularly to North America , from Gatwick on a midday flight from Liverpool .
7 Still , I suppose you would have to develop a certain detachment , otherwise you 'd never be able to carry on with what you 're working on at the moment . ’
8 It is hoped that social scientists will not only be able to carry out with greater ease and rapidity those types of computation previously undertaken on mainframe computers but that they may also be able to take advantage of the machines ’ ability to handle graphical information .
9 To be a good government officer you must be able to put up with these frustrations .
10 The Big Six are in an unassailable position and no new firm formed through mergers in the second tier will ever be able to catch up with them , according to former Arthur Andersen senior partner Ian Hay Davison .
11 ‘ He told me you were the kind of man who might be able to catch up with Vecchi .
12 Indeed far from being fearful of continued public objection , local authorities should be more concerned about their ability to be able to keep up with public demand for calming various residential areas once the ideas take off .
13 They note that Microsoft is already talking about bringing out a similar product of its own , a typical Microsoft tactic , and will probably create a good deal of fear , uncertainty and doubt over WABI 's technical prowess and whether it will be able to keep up with Microsoft 's innovations .
14 A young wildebeest is able to run almost as soon as it is born , for it must be able to keep up with the other wildebeest when they flee a predator .
15 The situation is such that by 2010 , timber supplies might not be able to keep up with demand .
16 That , in his view , is long enough to be able to come up with new ideas and see them implemented .
17 Now we will be able to come up with a plan in response to the many issues raised .
18 But solipsism is intuitively unacceptable ; and nobody seems to be able to come up with an argument from analogy that will do the trick .
19 You might well be able to come up with more ideas of your own .
20 Hence representing revenues from community X by R(X) we can say : The consequence is that the group of three communities would not be willing to go for the scheme involving supply to all three , since they would not be able to come up with an agreed method of sharing the £650 .
21 Cellini may not be able to come up with the goods .
22 Set up a lab like mine and run the same experiments , and anyone should be able to come up with the same results , for they do not depend on excessively mysterious skills or tricks , and science is after all , in the words of its most passionately admiring philosophers , public knowledge .
23 ‘ Given access to the data back at your office , I should be able to come up with a suitable package . ’
24 Well I think there 's every chance that it will get the go-ahead er I mean obviously er there are money restraints but I 'm sure that the District Council will be able to come up with the appropriate amount .
25 Wo n't be able to come in with me any day I thought that was .
26 Or Sally maybe would be able to come down with you Saturday and help you ?
27 Empowering local communities , that 's what really frightens the Tories , because what it means is they 'll never be able to come back with those repressive and regressive policies that they brought in two years ago .
28 So it looks as if cameramen ( rather than the proposed cameramans ) will be able to get on with their work in the Gulf ; the beloved accent on abîme will not fall into the abyss ; and the whole affair will have been a non-événement .
29 It can he useful to recap on the action you want taken after putting on pressure : ‘ If I call talk about it today , then I 'll be able to get on with the project — if I ca n't , the project is going to have to he delayed .
30 ( a ) ‘ If I can talk about it today , then I 'll be able to get on with the project — if I ca n't , the project is going to have to be delayed .
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