Example sentences of "[verb] [adj] people " in BNC.

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1 I do n't think needy people from other countries should be deprived of treatment , but surely our citizens should come first — especially as they help fund the NHS .
2 Not surprisingly , when we asked deaf people to examine videotapes of teachers using simultaneous communication , their rating of effectiveness closely matched their rating of the teachers ' use of facial expression .
3 ‘ I do n't want anyone to be frightened , but I do n't want unnecessary people getting in the way . ’
4 Finally , he reaffirmed the changing role of the CAP in helping rural people make a living off the land by encouragement of environmentally friendly farming methods , support for forestry and an early retirement and restructuring scheme .
5 ‘ That 's the first time Bailey met posh people , ’ photography writer , Martin Harrison says .
6 Liverpool Mayor Rosie Cooper , the daughter of deaf parents , said : ‘ They are ridiculing deaf people . ’
7 They may , for instance , be capable of rising magnificently to the occasion when a neighbour 's sick , deprived , or even delinquent child needs help , or they may be wonderful wives , husbands or parents and do much useful voluntary work in the community , and yet lack the particular type of emotional muscle required to support old people .
8 Although the phrase ‘ care workers ’ is not in general use , the term has been chosen to describe a wide range of people who may be employed in the voluntary or statutory sectors and who have responsibility for the services made available in the community to support old people and their caring relatives .
9 There was very little sign in this report of constructive planning to use social work skills to support old people and their carers .
10 And we ourselves became different people from those we had been a minute ago , when we were teasing Filimon the goat or getting into a fight with Pechonkin 's street gang .
11 Erm and once they got the problem resolved , you know , then they became different people .
12 What is more , current social work and health policy seeks to move away from institutionalized forms of care provided by elderly persons ' homes and hospitals , concentrating instead on maintaining ageing people within their own homes .
13 Not people that could that can defend themselves that can what 's the name of it if they could Well they 've broken old people 's doors in and took their money and and hit them and whatsername .
14 Mr. Thomas Graham ( Renfrew , West and Inverclyde ) : The new clause offers Scottish people the opportunity to have at least some confidence in the Government 's attitude to the privatisation of the bus service .
15 ‘ We would like to see British people come because we have a special relationship with you , ’ says Ali Said .
16 But I mean old people
17 These included carrying out further work on the impacts of relocating tribal people , and studying the effect on fisheries .
18 I mean charming people , lovely food
19 You can have that Frank , you ca n't have several different sales reps going into seeing different people and my people seeing them as well .
20 Employers in general appeared to see ageing people as a national responsibility rather than as their immediate concern .
21 While the pervasiveness and uniformity of television news made it unlikely that it would influence different people in different ways , the press seemed likely to influence different readers in very different ways .
22 Q. Would you prefer to see English people ?
23 In particular , if a historical perspective enters into the survey it may well be quite invaluable to interview old people for their memories of the community as it was so many years ago .
24 It will describe and analyse how pupils perceive foreign people , in particular the French , and which environmental factors , including foreign language teaching , influence their perceptions .
25 I can see my life as a road , and I can go back on that road and see what I 've passed and come to terms with what I have passed by without realising and appreciating ; how I 've stopped in various cafes on the way and met interesting people in them and had fascinating conversations when all the time I should have been speaking to the person on the next table instead . ’
26 I can see my life as a road , and I can go back on that road and see what I 've passed and come to terms with and what I have passed by without realising and appreciating ; how I 've stopped in various cafes on the way and met interesting people in them and had fascinating conversations when all the time I should have been speaking to the person on the next table instead . ’
27 erm I agree , and I actually think these figures are relatively crude , but I mean , there is , clearly there are correlations between low income , which most I mean unemployed people have of course got , and ill health .
28 the primary objective of departmental policies … is to enable old people to maintain independent lives in the community for as long as possible .
29 That a prohibition thus independently justifiable works out to affect different people differently is no reason to condemn it as non-neutral , provided it was instituted or continues for ( something like ) the reasons which justify it … similarly with the prohibitions and enforcements of the minimal state .
30 This is a new addition to a range of measures which include Jobclubs , the Job Interview Guarantee Scheme and other tested methods of helping unemployed people back to work .
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