Example sentences of "[v-ing] [adj] people " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 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 .
2 Liverpool Mayor Rosie Cooper , the daughter of deaf parents , said : ‘ They are ridiculing deaf people . ’
3 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 .
4 These included carrying out further work on the impacts of relocating tribal people , and studying the effect on fisheries .
5 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 .
6 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 .
7 Roger : For some time people who study the labour market have been recommending using money paid as benefit , to subsidise the cost of helping unemployed people back into work .
8 The additional resources planned will be directed towards helping unemployed people , improving the skills of the work force and assisting small businesses and enterprise .
9 In fact , they will all be maintained and will play an increasingly important role in helping unemployed people .
10 It will be apparent from the earlier discussion that a simple assertion about helping old people maintain their independence does not do justice to the subtleties of achieving a balance between independence and dependence which is acceptable or tolerable to the old people concerned .
11 Education is important in enabling rural people to organise and plan , as much as it is in ensuring that the urban majority understand the nature of rural problems and lend their support to solving them .
12 Hansen ( 1980 ) maintains that hearing people can learn sign language to a satisfactory extent and can be successful in passive learning , i.e. understanding deaf people 's signing , within a short time .
13 The same argument applies to the choice between employing ready-trained people or being prepared to train them .
14 Other firms , like B&Q , are employing retired people and ‘ mature workers ’ in their businesses .
15 Since June 1987 he has been found representing working people 's rights to employment , water , light , drainage and decent accommodation .
16 Particularly I think to the , to , to , not to provide something that they encounter elsewhere , the hoops they have to go through in order to get benefit , the restart programme , we 're not interested in that we 're interested in solidarity support , rebuilding confidence , keep keeping unemployed people in contract with the local trade union movement , and that that 's something that I personally regard as extremely important and something that , that erm with this partnership of the Labour Party , the Labour Group and the Trades Council and the trade unions in the area , I think we do very effectively .
17 Better ways of representing old people at risk of abuse should be sought and developed .
18 But I think that the greatest tribute of all that can be paid to Peggy , and I feel sure it would come from her members and it 's this , and it 's basically what the trade union movement is all about and it 's about representing ordinary people at the shop floor because whenever anybody asks Peggy to do anything for them , to represent them , she 's always the first one there .
19 Such guardianship was seen as a way of protecting vulnerable people from exploitation , ill treatment , or neglect .
20 These are all parts of the switch-on mechanism because the switch-on mechanism depends upon a decent organization employing decent people and treating them as we individually would wish to be treated .
21 Today the main task may be matching key people to skills to vacancies available .
22 A review of legislation on protecting elderly people 's property ; social workers ' powers to intervene in abuse ; registration of private domiciliary care
23 Talking with their age peers may also be important , and small group counselling can be a useful means of both enabling elderly people to realize that their sexual needs are not unusual , and putting them into contact with others who may have similar or even corresponding needs .
24 Rationality is not just a matter for individuals as individuals becoming reasonable people .
25 These include possible reductions in care in the community owing to inadequate funding and the knock on effects on hospitals , which may face even greater difficulties in returning elderly people to the community than at present .
26 In 1951 , the Employment Fellowship ( formerly the Winter Distress League ) turned to the problem of keeping elderly people employed for as long as possible ( Employment Fellowship 1958 ) .
27 Full consultations with relevant voluntary organisations representing disabled people .
28 Groups representing disabled people were horrified at the proposals .
29 The largest company employing disabled people in Britain is Remploy , which is run as a profit-making business , but equipped with machinery specially made for use by the disabled , and supervisors who are trained to help the disabled staff cope .
30 We have seen mass employers getting awards for schemes for employing disabled people , when they operate in premises which are completely inaccessible .
  Next page