Example sentences of "[noun pl] [pron] bring [adv prt] " in BNC.

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1 Even the Sioux Indians immortalised in Dances With Wolves are angry because it will divert money from their bingo halls which bring in revenue to poor reservations .
2 People also need to learn the practical skills which bring about improvement the problem solving techniques and diagnostic tools for finding the way through seemingly impassable barriers .
3 Reassessing the skills you bring back to nursing or health visiting can be a worthwhile preparation for returning to practice , even if you feel a poor judge of what skills might be most needed in the future .
4 Whilst they only fill a tenth of seats they bring in a lot more income , in Virgin 's case almost half .
5 Now this I dependably find a real throw-up number but there 's never anything too horrendous because , as my colleagues are always saying , we 're at the darning-and-patching level of the biomedical business : the serious cases we bring in direct , and at speed , from the city hospitals , and we in our turn get rid of them as quickly as we can .
6 It is not one to rally the world 's peasantries , pastoralists and other land-users to change the social conditions which bring about soil erosion in the first place .
7 They should also make us determined to prevent the conditions which bring out this aspect of our nature .
8 The paintings you bring back retain so much more in memories and association than photographs .
9 Well , apple tart , but you know , things we bring in , apple tarts erm , custard slices , a the occasional eclair erm , yeah , we do quite a range , actually .
10 I want you to concentrate on the way the rooms themselves bring about certain kinds of behaviour .
11 In our experience it is often grandparents or other family members who bring up children when their HIV infected parents have died or are unable to cope : account needs to be taken of the pressure exerted within extended families in such cases .
12 This is due in part to an increase in the proportion of births outside marriage and of mothers who bring up these children themselves as well as to less pressure on young women and men to ‘ legitimise ’ a conception with a ‘ shot-gun wedding ’ .
13 There are other mothers who bring up boys in wartime without their being brutalised .
14 It is these economic stresses which bring about the tragedy of Margaret and her family and lead eventually to the Ruined Cottage , which remains as a symbol of these afflictions .
15 There are reckoned to be about 2,000 UK publishers who bring out at least one book during any given six month period .
16 the women who bring up their children in poverty still bring up their children in poverty .
17 In other cases it is a combination of circumstances or traumatic events which bring about the troubled state of mind .
18 Jesus likens those who have been instructed about the Kingdom of Heaven to householders who bring out of their treasures things both new and old ( Matthew 13:52 ) .
19 The Katmandu meeting has called on expeditions to reduce the amount of supplies they bring in , make more use of local produce , carry out their own waste , and be more efficient in their use of fuel .
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