Example sentences of "with its [noun] of " in BNC.
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1 | West Lancs with its towns of Ormskirk and Skelmersdale connects nationwide via its own M58 motorway linked to M6 and M62 . |
2 | Beyond the court , beyond the wall with its globes of protecting lights , I could see the bulbous tower of the family mosque . |
3 | And then , when she looked at the high terrace with its pots of trailing geraniums , she could see nothing for the shadow was so intense — not the pale blob of a face or the movement of a hand — but she was suddenly as sure as she could be of anything that someone was standing there , looking down , waiting for them to get out of the car and watching them . |
4 | It is this ultimate danger which , probably more than anything else , has surrounded the nuclear industry with its following of fearful spectators . |
5 | With its line-up of twin fiddles , the redoubtable Sharon on box , Ringo on bodhrán and the talents of Francis Black and Seán Keane on vocals — Arcady were one of the most exciting musical combinations of modern times . |
6 | In the late afternoon Angel Clare offered to drive the waggon with its buckets of milk to the station . |
7 | And the more Ronni saw of Guido 's beautiful island with its contrasts of perfect chic and untamed wild , the more fascinated and drawn to it she felt . |
8 | More opulent was the holo-sign with its fantasy of opal on quartz ; baroque music stroked arpeggios on the air . |
9 | The Aachen Gospels with its Christ-image of Otto III , has itself also a highly dramatic series of Christ illustrations . |
10 | With its sounds of many cars and few birds , dawn faded . |
11 | Eric Voegelin has emphasized the fundamental difference between what he calls the ‘ cosmological ’ civilizations , which presupposed the political symbolization of the cosmos typified by Babylonia with its epic of Marduk , and ‘ eschatological ’ civilizations such as the Hebrew — but first exemplified by the Iranian — based on the religion of Zarathustra . |
12 | The cadets did not as yet , of course , visit the vast locked guarded complex of the Armoury , with its racks of weapons and magazines of ammunition both pristine and ancient , protected within stasis fields inside chambers of adamantium . |
13 | The establishment of the Harpur Trust in 1764 , with its provision of marriage portions for girls , and apprenticeships for boys was said to have brought many paupers to the town . |
14 | The Treasury , with its provision of guidance to departments on the development and application of output measures and performance indicators . |
15 | The buzzing town centre is only 500 metres away , with its variety of lively bars and discos . |
16 | CHRISTMAS lunch with its variety of succulent flavours is a food lover 's dream . |
17 | But , with its lack of paradox , its sonorous and sentimental prose , The Temple of My Familiar reads like one enormous gospel-chant of reassurance for blacks , devoid somehow of truth . |
18 | This implied a division of labour between manufacturing in the UK , and raw material and food production in the colonies , a doctrine which the Colonial Office broadly accepted , in line with its lack of sympathy with colonial industrialization as likely to be socially and politically disruptive . |
19 | The opposite of loving is indifference , with its lack of feeling one way or the other . |
20 | Its convenience and ease of use , however , together with its lack of serious side effects , should encourage use of glucagon as the first line treatment for hypoglycaemia . |
21 | Amiodarone , with its lack of negative inotropism , broad spectrum of action , and high efficacy is the only drug of its kind available for use in life threatening arrythmias in patients with severe left ventricular impairment . |
22 | Possibly the West Saxon monarchy 's links with the new monasticism had something to do with its lack of popularity in northern Mercia and Northumbria . |
23 | Perhaps now that Morse , with its lack of overt sex or violence , has in recent weeks achieved the highest rating of any current programme , producers and writers may realise that delving into the same old muck no longer wins large audiences . |
24 | The organization of presbyterianism rests strongly upon the local community , with its division of authority between minister and elders . |
25 | Of course , there is a danger of demagogy , but we feel in Czechoslovakia , with its traditions of competence , that we have a much better chance than some other countries . |
26 | They continued on along the line of booths , each with its owner sitting on the counter among his stained , dirty jars like some vast black spider , past the long , carpet-covered benches in front of them with the rows of men drinking coffee and smoking and talking , past the assorted smells of rose and jasmine , amber and banana , past the odd little restaurants with their grand brass jugs of hot water , their servants hurrying with coffee in glasses to some merchant about to strike a deal , past all this and then suddenly through the arch of the Bab es Zuweyla with its two soaring and fantastic minarets and out once more into the Tentmakers ' Bazaar with its donkey-saddles of red brocade and its camel-trappings adorned with cowries and little bits of looking-glass , its gaily-striped awnings and brilliant tent linings . |
27 | With its 1Mb of display memory it will give you a maximum resolution of 1,280 by 1,024 in 16 colours as well as provide non-interlaced video at 72Hz in 1,024 by 768 mode . |
28 | The reader is told that founder John Fowler ‘ took the romantic spirit of late eighteenth-century decoration , the simplicity of rural life with its celebration of nature , and fashioned it into a style of its own . ’ |
29 | To the conventions of the romantic historical novel , then , Anthony Hope added the colour of society in his day and the pattern of love and courtship which appear , in a far less interesting way , in his novels of his own London society , and he drew in a more general way from the Victorian version of medieval chivalry , with its idealisation of woman and its desire for service to an ideal . |
30 | The Livingstonian GLC , even with its espousal of lesbian and gay rights , was electorally viable until Thatcher & Co. , in the face of Labour defensiveness , managed to move the ideological goalposts . |