I believe that the term "With accordance..." is not necessarily a correct phrase. When referring to accordance, one is not with accordance, one would be in accordance. Thus, the term "In accordance..." would be a better phrase to use.
For example: "In accordance with the treaty of Versailles..."
In accordance with is equivalent to pursuant to, which is the phrase favored by lawyers. It means in conformity with or conforming with or in agreement with.
agreement; conformity;the act of granting.accordance- noun. (in phrase in accordance with) in a manner conforming with.
'In the hope that' is the correct phrase.
This is not a sentence it is a phrase and as a phrase it is correct.
I love you too, babe is the correct phrase
In accordance with is equivalent to pursuant to, which is the phrase favored by lawyers. It means in conformity with or conforming with or in agreement with.
With minimal editing, the phrase would read better rendered as: "She helped the students reach the level of fluency and comprehension that was in accordance with their objective."
agreement; conformity;the act of granting.accordance- noun. (in phrase in accordance with) in a manner conforming with.
You can use the phrase "in accordance" to show that something is following a particular rule, guideline, or agreement. For example, "The project was completed in accordance with the client's specifications."
'In the hope that' is the correct phrase.
If you are referring to this sentence, no, it does not resemble a correct phrase AT ALL.
This is not a sentence it is a phrase and as a phrase it is correct.
That is the correct spelling of "phrase" (word group, or to use specific words).
The correct phrase is "sufficient proof".
It depends on how you use the phrase: Can you provide me a copy of your CV? - correct
No, the correct phrase is veni vidi vici.
The phrase "how don't I" is not grammatically correct. A more correct way to phrase it would be "why don't I."