Example sentences of "[to-vb] the [noun] [prep] [art] children " in BNC.

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1 Mrs Wood is pleased to see the back of the children 's father , and may denigrate him in conversation with or overheard by John ( possible inference from lines 21 and 22 ) .
2 People who have helped could also be invited into the school at the end of the project to see the results of the children 's work .
3 Supportive help is needed to sustain the personality of the children . ’
4 It may well be in this mis-match of experience that the first seeds of misunderstanding and destructive tension are sown , particularly as the education officer is often perceived as ‘ the authority ’ , in several senses of the word , while the head has a greater knowledge of the processes of education required in school to meet the needs of the children .
5 The task of teachers is to help the less able master basic skills , to meet the needs of the children of average ability and to encourage and satisfy the needs of the children who are exceptionally able .
6 I was told that the local authority were still maintaining an open mind about the possibility of placing the children with the father and that the choice of foster parents made in October was intended to cover the possibility of the children being returned to the father , but also to cover the possibility of a need for the children to be with foster parents for some longer time , in the event of the assessment of the father proving unsatisfactory .
7 3 … if there are three adults working together , A and B can stay in role , C stays out of role , is able to focus the attention of the children , to reflect and summarise with them , and to give colleagues useful feedback both on the drama itself and on teaching techniques .
8 As things turned out , Benjamin just lived beyond the Victorian era and into the Edwardian : on Sunday 3 September 1905 he was in church about to play the organ for a children 's service when he collapsed .
9 The justices said that they did this , rather than making an interim care order , to ensure the bonding of the children with their mother for their long term benefit .
10 As I have indicated earlier in this judgment , the justices made these orders expressly to ensure the bonding of the children with their mother for their long term benefit .
11 It is undoubtedly true that when a family member dies , other members of the family are often too upset themselves to recognize the distress of the children in their midst .
12 The court has to consider the child 's welfare as the court 's paramount consideration , and also has to consider the various aspects referred to under section 1(3) , that is they have to consider the wishes of the children , their needs , the likely effects on the children of change , the characteristics of the children , the nature of the harm they have suffered and the capability of the parents or anybody else offering themselves as carers , which would include of course the grandparents in this case .
13 He submits that the court is simply not entitled to do what Booth J. did — that is to say , to consider the interests of the children in relation to all the circumstances of the case .
14 I have great sympathy with the needs of village schools but at the end ofg the day we have to consider the needs of the children and I have no doubt in my mind that trying to open a school in Brockweir is simply not on for the children .
15 The consequence was that the local authority had to consider the situation of the children , including carrying out an assessment of the prospect of the children making their permanent home with their father who , by now , had a new partner .
16 The making of the images becomes the first part of the drama , in which ( for example ) the work is inspected by the teacher in role as new Mayor , who commissions a statue to commemorate the return of the children of Hamelin !
17 The local authority , being anxious to place the mother with the children in a mother and baby home with a view to rehabilitation , sought an interim care order relating to both boys and informed the justices that it was their intention to keep the mother and children together for assessment and at the same time protect the children from the father .
18 It is not the father 's wish or intention to seek the care of the children provided that they live with the mother in Australia .
19 HAVING JUST read the article by Audrey Hepburn on the starving children in Somalia ( they need £10m just until Christmas ) , would n't it be a wonderful gesture to donate the proceeds from the Children in Need Appeal to this cause just for this year ?
20 A planned tutorial programme was prepared by the senior mistress , head of house and the child 's tutor to raise the awareness of the children in the tutor group .
21 In order to equal the shares of the children , any sum paid by the intestate to a child by way of advancement or on the marriage of the child must be brought into account .
22 It is submitted that there was no need to make a different order from an interim care order in order to achieve that end , because the stated intention of the local authority was to maintain the relationship between the mother and the children , as has been evidenced by what has happened since , and that the interim care order in itself would not have affected bonding , indeed the whole of the exercise was to maintain the bonding of the children with the mother .
23 Davide took a third orange , and the sharp vegetable knife his mother had been using , and cut into the rind , sliding his eyes sideways to get the attention of the children , of his little brother Franco , of Caterina , and his cousins before the heat pushed them as well over the edge into sleep .
24 Our policy has always been to improve the welfare of the children in the long-term by improving hygiene . ’
25 The only way to improve the health of the children is to ensure they get non-radiated food , clean water and air .
26 In a reserved judgment Booth J. decided in the exercise of her discretion that she would decline to order the return of the children to Australia .
27 Once the door has been ‘ unlocked , ’ he submits the court should be obliged to consider whether it is appropriate in all the circumstances to decline to order the return of the children to the country from which they have been wrongfully removed .
28 In this case the finding that the father had acquiesced in the removal and/or retention of the children in England made it appropriate for the court to consider whether to decline to order the return of the children .
29 Friends and well-wishers gather at Kirkwall Airport to await the return of the children to Orkney .
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