Example sentences of "[pron] [vb -s] [det] [verb] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 It is an executable image which controls all accesses to the information under the control of LIFESPAN by servicing requests from one or more LIFESPAN users .
2 If one combines those living below the SB line with those within 140 per cent of it — i.e. those ‘ on the margins of poverty ’ — low wages mean that 3.75 million people suffer serious deprivation .
3 Pareto does not consider politics or government as subjects separate from sociology , and he has little to say about the concept of power as such .
4 Hill , married with two sons , will start his racing career with Williams in the South African Grand Prix at Kyalami in 12 weeks time — and admits he has much to learn from the ‘ old professor ’ Prost .
5 Although not if he has any say in the matter : ‘ I understand I 'm currently eighteenth in the list of funniest comedians … and falling , ’ he retorts , before almost smiling , although not quite .
6 It fits perfectly the charm and naivety of the early to mid-fifties ; it has little to do with the self conscious posturings of the later period that Scobie wishes to impute to it ; most of all that of the ‘ Beat generation ’ , for most of the book had been written before Howl howled and junkie commenced the near-universal junketings .
7 It has little to do with the quality of his jokes or the televisual cut of his suiting , although adequate performance here is important .
8 So of his falling in love with Mrs Moore we are merely informed that ‘ even if I were free to tell the story , I doubt if it has much to do with the subject of this book , ’ and of his father 's death in the late summer of 1929 that this ‘ does not really come into the story I am telling ’ .
9 It is clear that reading is a dynamic activity in which the reader is actively involved — that it has much to do with the reader 's thought processes .
10 The fact that his form has been positively Bradmanesque may have something to do with this , but one suspects it has more to do with the ‘ Get Out of Jail Free ’ card he appears to be clutching .
11 While this is a welcome help it does little to compensate for the difference in service provision between the urban and rural areas .
12 He suggests that shifts in the social and political climate in the United States may have had something to do with this change : the very dates of the steep rise of interest in functionalism among sociological theorists also suggests that it may have some ideological import .
13 In western music , he believes this consists of the piece 's sequence of pitches .
14 What does that do for the campaign against drug imports ?
15 What does that do for the morale of the Law Commission ?
16 So it 's it appeals to the right brain that visual aspect it can take attention it can actually make the presenter move around when it switches attention what does that do for the audience then ?
17 But what does that mean for the local residents ?
18 And what does that mean to the tourist from Britain ?
19 As my PC has exactly this configuration , what does this mean to the uninitiated ?
20 What does this mean for the traditional large factory town ?
21 If the rate of return on assets is 17 per cent for all firms , what does this imply about the dividend yields of the four firms ?
22 2 If you do not have the same answer as the one at the end of 6 , what does this reveal about the schema you employed to interpret this discourse ?
23 But what does this means for the homes in particular ?
24 What does this survey of the impact of the second wave tell us about the likely impact of the third wave in the 1990s and the consequences for developing managers ?
25 What 's that say at the bottom bit ?
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