Similar words: green with envy, take up with, take liberties with, down with, taken, get in with, go on with, get on with. Meaning: adj. marked by foolish or unreasoning fondness.
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31. She was thrilled to have her picture taken with Mel Gibson.
32. Taken with other environmental indicators, such as land snail shells and insect remains, they also give information about the prevailing climate.
33. These supplement their core academic courses, which are taken with the rest of their classmates in the regular high school.
34. Photographs taken with large telescopes are needed to bring out their vivid colours, and with binoculars they appear white and milky.
35. She went on record to reassure parents that no children were taken with a revenge motive.
36. The unsinkable had sunk,(http://sentencedict.com/taken with.html) and taken with it half of its passengers and crew.
37. This means that the figures quoted in this paragraph have to be taken with a small pinch of salt.
38. These conclusions must be taken with caution because food composition values for vitamin B6 are still in the developmental stage. 10.
39. Gravy may be taken with the dinner menus, provided it is made with gravy powder or low-fat granules.
40. But even this seemingly logical conclusion must be taken with a grain of salt.
41. Her mouth was being taken with a possessive intensity that obliterated thought and left only sensation.
42. Care needs to be taken with medical records and old original documents that do not copy well.
43. Even Big Macs at times need to be taken with a pinch of salt.
44. He had taken with him more badness than goodness, leaving not a vacuum, but a breathing space.
45. While the first statement is no doubt true, the second must be taken with a pinch of salt.
46. It's a secret that the man who led a double life has taken with his to the grave.
47. Everybody wants to shake his hand, have a picture taken with him, tell him how funny he is.
48. Great care was taken with his education, but teaching him what he did not wish to learn was a dangerous business.
49. Once sentenced to death the nightmare gets worse: very little care is taken with the inmate's emotions.
50. A soft approach can be taken with management on job security, benefits-in-kind, salaries, golden handshakes and so on.
51. One has only to think of the variety of positions that can be taken with respect to qualitative and quantitative research.
52. The defeat was taken with equanimity by the leadership.
53. Picture taken with a fisheye lens underwater.
54. On that night his wife was taken with labour.
55. This photograph was taken with a cheap camera.
56. I was quite taken with your line of photocopiers with collation and stapling capability.
57. I was quite taken with him when I was young.
58. The Group President Tangsirisaree had a photo taken with Canadian immigration and Citizenship Judge Louis Sekora and RCMP Officer in Vancouver.
59. Photos are taken with the camera away from the computer and stored on a memory chip.
60. An empirical research is taken with data from manufacturing in China to verify aforesaid postulation and compare with overseas practice.
More similar words: green with envy, take up with, take liberties with, down with, taken, get in with, go on with, get on with, fall in with, fit in with, begin with, betaken, take note, taken up, keep in with, reckon with, reason with, take notes, partaken, mistaken, to begin with, carry on with, concern with, take notice, taken over, overtaken, take note of, take no notice, undertaken, mistakenly.