Example sentences of "[vb -s] his [conj] [pron] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Every person has his or her own presence .
2 A mixture of something old and something new , everybody here at Club has his or her own favourite , and we 've also asked a few personalities to say a few words about their number 1 trip .
3 There will be a good choice of varieties , as each dealer has his or her own favourites aside from the usual Kohaku/Sanke/ogon mix .
4 ‘ There are very few craft-based training centres with dedicated training classrooms , where each student , eight or 12 to a classroom , has his or her own stove , bench and drawer .
5 Each of us has his or her own turn-ons and hang-ups , any of which may be " deviant " from the point of view of some others .
6 Every individual has his or her own writing style so the word ‘ truck ’ looks very different when written by two different people .
7 It can get a bit like M15 at times — each guest has his or her own dressing-room with a secret code number to get in — we 're constantly changing the numbers so that nobody can sneak in .
8 Each member of the Community has his or her own room except in the case of families when brothers or sisters can share a room .
9 ( e ) Receipted mortgages Unless the mortgagee has his or her own solicitor , it 's for the seller 's conveyancer to prepare and obtain the discharge of any mortgage over the property , and this is a reminder to prepare , in the case of a registered title , the Discharge of Registered Charge ( LR form 53 ) , or in the case of an unregistered title the usual statutory receipt endorsed on the original mortgage .
10 Every consultant has his or her own number and so does the assignment
11 As Easton 's section police see it , a competent member of the RUC is one who uses his or her common sense .
12 Anyone , whether it was Pilate then , or you or me today , who rejects and crucifies Christ afresh , seals his or her own doom .
13 The card is valid until the holder reaches his or her 20th birthday .
14 By protecting the supply of alcohol or drugs for the primary sufferer , the family member protects his or her own supply of self denial and caretaking .
15 The first view would suggest that in Cabinet issues are ‘ up for grabs ’ and whichever minister gets his or her own way on an issue has power .
16 It also means that the speaker hears his or her own voice and this acts as a check that the system is working .
17 Payments are probably dealt with by some junior clerk who applies his or her own interpretation of what the company wants .
18 It is perhaps also the feature which from a ‘ curriculum manager 's ’ viewpoint most restricts his or her professional discretion — all the more so because it is an extension of the existing educational culture : an innovation which to many people seems commonsensical , operating as it were ‘ with the grain ’ of the system .
19 In the Weberian ideal the civil servant is an automaton , an infinitely pliable administrative chameleon , who serves his or her political masters faithfully ( within the law ) .
20 ( a ) a contract of employment , in the course of which , the individual engineer sells his or her professional skills for gain , e.g. the individual engineer works directly for an employer or partnership .
21 Gradually society 's standards become internalised and an individual becomes his or her own source of rewards and punishments ; for example congratulating him or herself for being polite and feeling guilty for being rude .
22 and even if they did buy without a solicitors assistance , what was the system about sending them the letter which we 've looked at earlier which is at erm D one , five , two , remember this is the letter that goes to Mr solicitors assuming you get a very rare person who does his or her own conveyance
23 Be friendly and try to give the impression that you are a person of integrity who knows his or her own mind , and are not likely to abandon a deal half-way through .
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