Example sentences of "[noun pl] [verb] [prep] [noun pl] ' [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 - Buses in the morning and afternoon are suddenly full of children , traffic jams are caused by cars containing family groups and signs appear in tobacconists ' shops : ‘ Sorry , No More Than One Schoolchild In Here At A Time , Put Your Arms Up and Stand Against The Wall To Be Searched When Requested .
2 London Ambulance Service workers claimed the system crash last October led to people 's deaths , but yesterday 's document said an examination of 26 cases considered by coroners ' courts showed the LAS had not been blamed for a single death .
3 For the law and rules relating to debtors ' petitions , see Chapter 3 .
4 The LA has to be assured by the applicant that he understands the importance of the rules relating to drivers ' hours , records and tachograph requirements , rules which need careful study .
5 In 1980 a working party of the Association for Science Education published a collection of papers ( Language in Science ) which deal with the role of language in science education and make proposals relating to teachers ' needs .
6 Nor did the questionnaires completed by patients ' relatives show any differences in the signs of hypoglycaemia with either insulin ( median ( range ) score for signs at onset of hypoglycaemia 34 ( 4–48 ) for human insulin v 32.5 ( 5–45 ) for porcine ; 95% confidence interval -5 to 15 , Z =0.3 , p=0.79 ) .
7 It has been argued that the present day focus of international law is upon disputes relating to parties ' interests in satisfying needs , and values , rather than upon formalistic attention to rights .
8 ( 1986 ) find that even today , where referees refer to candidates ' families , they see those of female candidates as problems they have overcome , but refer to those of male candidates as assets .
9 Ludus is strictly for women with their eyes set on newsagents ' mid-shelves
10 So was the way in which the Treasury department , Congress and federal deposit insurers jumped on thrifts ' investments in junk bonds .
11 Some provide extensive facilities and pioneer new methods of treatment , education and care ; others are small social clubs meeting in members ' houses for companionship and leisure activities .
12 The president 's television addresses activated grass-roots support in members ' districts , but administration strategists were not content to leave the matter there .
13 Often parents sit on pupils ' chairs facing the teacher across the teacher 's desk , a situation which gives clear messages of status and power .
14 Many wore jewelled , gilded coronets fringed with lions ' manes .
15 Since last November the average settlements recorded by Rewards ' clients has been 5 p.c .
16 Whilst the sale itself can be effected only by acte notarie , it is worth remembering that many of the contracts drawn by sellers ' Agents are prepared without a sight of the title deeds .
17 Coping with custody : a study of survival strategies used by prisoners ' families
18 Marvellous similes flowed from journalists ' pens .
19 When times are good , ever-optimistic bankers still lend ; in hard times , mysterious accounts add to creditors ' suspicions .
20 The results for all the other NFER tests trialled during this project are referred to the attainment bands formed from pupils ' scores on the GT4 test .
21 For example , a local Age Concern group in one area ran a highly imaginative scheme of ‘ respite care ’ , in which the Manpower Services Commission community programme was used to provide workers to go into carers ' homes to provide relief .
22 Start by looking at the stocks carried by builders ' merchants in your area .
23 And finally plots of houses or factories overlap with farmers ' fields .
24 It invades privacy , with investigators spying on claimants ' homes and questioning their children ( Lister , 1973 ) .
25 THE FIRST challenge under powers to appeal against judges ' decisions to ban the press and public from court failed in the Appeal Court yesterday .
26 It seems natural to assert that the extent to which managers deviate from owners ' interests will depend upon the degree of scope available to them and the degree to which they are constrained .
27 The values indicate that , given the assumptions made about firms ' costs , the dominant firms were acting slightly more competitively than Cournot while the blenders were acting less competitively than Cournot .
28 We round a couple of buoys beaded with cats ' eyes ; sea traffic islands .
29 Again two main dimensions emerged from parents ' answers , called love-hostility and control-autonomy but referring essentially to the same features as the dimensions described by Sears and his colleagues .
30 Now watchdog Lautro is clamping down and wants firms to pay for investors ' losses .
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