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do by

VERB
  1. interact in a certain way
    Treat him with caution, please
    Handle the press reporters gently
    Do right by her

How To Use do by In A Sentence

  • It has decreased the number of CVS and amniocenteses that I do by 30 percent," Philipson said. NewsNet5.com - Local News
  • There were also too many egos flying around the dressing room to accept being told what to do by a young unknown. The Sun
  • But there is nothing you can do to make it grow longer than it is programmed to do by your body chemistry.
  • four BENCHMARKS, as opposed to ascope-and-sequence or list of skills to be introduced, reinforced, and so on; that is, within benchmarked periods, content learning outcomescan be matched towhatstudents need to be able to do byfor grades 3, 7, 10 and12 August 2009
  • Remember babies never die from starvation, but many do by overkindness, and overfeeding is the most prolific cause of infant mortality known. The Eugenic Marriage, Volume I. (of IV.) A Personal Guide to the New Science of Better Living and Better Babies
  • Raised in the mountains of Colorado by hippie parents and exposed to feminist groups, back-to-the-land comestible culture, "new age" spiritual awareness, and antiquated birth techniques, Jacobsen's work has consistently drawn from the "land" and retains an exceptional sense of self. Alexander Adler: Jacobsen's Counter and Culture
  • A little beyond Dont (whence there is an easy and interesting way to Agordo by the Val Duram) the Pelmo rises up, pale, and shadowy, and most "majestical"; while at San Nicolo the Civita comes into sight again, half-hidden in rolling, silvery mists. Untrodden Peaks and Unfrequented Valleys
  • Folks of, shall we say, "browner" persuasions will increase Australia's Albedo by a far crack. Newmatilda.com - Comments
  • The breathtaking display of skill and derring-do by the cadets of the National Cadet Corps on Sunday left one dumbfounded.
  • May we not say that, whatever the social body, acting in its aggregate capacity, _can_ do to redress the balance -- whether in education of their children, in sanatory regulations which concern their workshops and their dwellings, or in judicious charity that will not press upon the springs of industry -- it is _bound_ to do by the sacred obligation of justice? Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 56, Number 349, November, 1844
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