Example sentences of "[noun] who [vb base] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 We offer four £5 book vouchers to readers who come up with the wittiest gag about scientists and engineers .
2 For example : You see like , the parents who come over from the West Indies , they try and teach their children this attitude " you 're English , you was born here , so you must talk the right and proper way , so you must n't talk like that " , but then after a time , as you get older , they do n't really worry about it too much .
3 As always they will go to businesses and organisations whose support for various aspects of the arts throughout 1992 has most impressed the ABSA judges who get down to the business of sifting through hundreds of entries early next month .
4 I 've encountered Arena -reading Young Conservatives who get off on The Smiths and Sex Pistols : I knew a girl whose favourite group is The Jam but who claims to be apolitical and whose one great desire in life is a Mercedes .
5 ‘ But unless they get the crowds who turn out for the visits of Linfield and Portadown , every week , cash will always be in short supply . ’
6 Guests who stay on over the Friday and Saturday nights and also have dinner in the hotel will receive free accommodation .
7 Shop and office workers who miss out on the best of the day only have their lunch breaks to enjoy the brief British summer .
8 A large number of dogs who end up in the rescue homes would be on the vet 's euthanasia list if they 'd had different owners .
9 For most families who move out to the rurban fringe , what new problems do they have for going shopping or to work ?
10 Christmas means the teams who go out from the TV licensing HQ in Bristol are getting ready to hear a lot more lame excuses .
11 There is also the chance of a lifetime for the talented teams who win through to the final .
12 There is a curious facility possessed by some writers , often those not of the first rank , which consists of an ability to create characters who step out of the surroundings in which they occur and enter the popular imagination .
13 But the people who go out in the cold all the time .
14 Yeah I mean we do get people who come in on the sort of the Friday morning and they 've already got their done their business perhaps sought out professional advice elsewhere
15 Head of sixth : This year they 're mostly Indians , that is the largest ethnic group of people who stay on to the sixth form , followed by the white children , then the Pakistani and West Indian in very small numbers .
16 Their elders make it upstairs in the flats , attended by small children — brothers and sisters who grow up in the Gorbals , Glasser says , to try it with each other .
17 I do n't think that there are teachers who pop out to the staffroom for the odd fix of some hard drug .
18 But they are true professionals who get on with the task in a methodical manner , no matter what the circumstances .
19 Dealing with your children 's friends who pop round in the evening calls for consummate diplomacy and the setting of time limits .
20 Further changes introduced by the 1986 Social Security Act were intended to increase the numbers who contract out of the SERP scheme .
21 The cartoon features a gang of street children who hang out in the town market — begging , stealing , doing odd jobs and just horsing around .
22 The cartoon features a gang of street children who hang out in the town market — begging , stealing , doing odd jobs and just horsing around .
23 This story is framed by the ramblings and reminiscences of three old men who hang out in the town square , acting as a comic chorus to the action and sketching in the historical background .
24 ‘ What about the tourists who come up from the village on foot or arrive in their cars to take a look at your goods ? ’ he demanded .
25 An unspoken agreement grants peace and prosperity , respectively , to scholars and publishers who stay out of the public debate .
26 Delightfully witty studies are given by Leon Sinden as the brother and by Neville Barber as the most waspish of the Oxford dons who gang up against the female intruder .
27 The working-class Protestants who totter back from the Twelfth field , obviously drunk but still marching behind a ‘ Total Abstinence Lodge ’ banner , will continue to be annoyed by the evangelical ideologues , but will respect the fact that the evangelicals ' hearts are in the right place .
28 We are the real fighters , the ones who come out of the company to fight for our rights .
29 ‘ Dead-end ’ partnerships evidently bring little reward to women who miss out on the normal progression from junior to senior status and the accompanying benefits .
30 They 're sentiments that come from falling between the two factions that all but dominate life in Oxford 's social centre : the yuppified , well-heeled types who hang around in the bars and bistros of the city 's bohemian quarter , and the massive student population .
  Next page