Example sentences of "[noun pl] [prep] those [pron] [vb mod] [vb infin] " in BNC.

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1 The sale of council houses , as Malpass and Murie argue , ‘ reduces the housing opportunities of those who must rent — of those who can not buy on grounds of means , age and eligibility for borrowing — and who rely on becoming council tenants and on transfers and exchanges to satisfy their housing need . ’
2 Laws and conventions constrain the broadcast media , who may nevertheless reproduce the voices of those who can adopt such a stance .
3 That same chapter has more to say about ritual of atonement , and chapter 18 is concerned with the identity and privileges of those who will carry out such ritual , and who will enable the people to dwell with the holiness of God without being destroyed by it .
4 A confidential study designed to assess the extent of professional abuse , follows investigations in America that showed one in 10 counsellors developed sexual relationships with those they should have been helping .
5 Of course the problems of distinguishing F from C , goat from sheep , are no worse than the problems teachers were faced with for years , when they had to separate O level candidates from those who would work for CSE .
6 It is not possible for those who are weak to apply this soul force for it makes great demands on those who would use it .
7 One of the last examples for this period was the conscious creation of a further naval base at Granville , in western Normandy , called the ‘ clef du pays par mer et par terre ’ by Charles VII in the charter by which he granted privileges to those who would come to settle there to keep it for the good of France .
8 It is not so much a question of what is promised as of the attitudes of those who will implement the decisions if the Tories are successful .
9 As explained in Chapter 8 , the NAI addresses the needs of people ; in the context of the FAOR package , it is concerned with clarifying the interests and preferences of those who will use any designed office system , and how they could affect its success .
10 Mature enough , in any case , to be recreating works from past decades for those who might have missed them .
11 At the same time , offering low rents to those who would agree to build in stone , he laid out a town which after seven years had a population of 25,000 , served by a free port .
12 State benefits create contradictory and ambiguous responses among those who must rely upon them .
13 It protects the weak against the strong , the poor against the rich , the women and children , fatherless and widows against those who would neglect and exploit them .
14 Since internal examinations are common it is important that doctors respect the needs of those who may require particularly sensitive handling .
15 When reading books illustrated by a Maurice Sendak or a Charles Keeping , children are brought into contact with the visual ideas of artists — ideas of those who would extend their ability to see works of art ( and the world about them ) with increasingly-experienced eyes .
16 But note that each cycle depends on communication of emerging ideas to those who can use them ; hence the importance of telling others about one 's findings and ideas and of finding out what others have reported about one 's own current concerns .
17 But note that each cycle depends on communication of emerging ideas to those who can use them ; hence the importance of telling others about one 's findings and ideas and of finding out what others have reported about one 's own current concerns .
18 It is clear that the warp and woof of everyday life in stepfamilies differs from that of unbroken families not merely because of external constraints which frustrate the efforts of those who may seek , as some do , to recast their family lives in the mould of the nuclear family , but that family norms themselves may also be markedly altered , tempered to fit the limits of the new situation and fabricated anew from the post-marital residue of family beliefs and sentiments .
19 Subjects in this study clearly knew that they were not objectively ‘ at risk ’ , nonetheless , their subjective ratings are consistent with them experiencing similar feelings to those they would have on the road .
20 Huddle had told him about the rogue , turning up in his garish garments and standing on the church steps , offering to sell pardons to those who could afford them .
21 Because the innovator has for enemies all those who have done well under the old conditions … and lukewarm defenders in those who may do well under the new .
22 His characteristic method is to make a statement so large or vague as to be practically meaningless , then to qualify that statement by explaining what he does not mean by it , and finally to outline the reasons why he does not propose to discuss matters arising from it ; he apologizes , at this point , for wandering off course but , instead of clarifying or refining his original proposition , he classifies the arguments of those who might object to it and proceeds to deal with their objections .
23 Even so the slow trains from Peterborough to Leicester , via Stamford , Oakham and Melton Mowbray , give us , visually , one of the great railway journeys for those who can appreciate the English landscape .
24 Frequently , the government repays doctors for their services ( and pharmaceutical companies for their drugs ) far below cost , forcing up the prices for those who can pay .
25 Successful applicants may be subjected to surprise random testing once they are hired -names of those who must provide a urine specimen are picked in a computerised lottery .
26 As Adam Smith observed , from individual greed come growth and prosperity for all , so long as there are sanctions against those who would profit by theft and mechanisms to ensure that all can share in the prosperity .
27 Social Security Secretary Peter Lilley said last week the lump sum , which will replace regular payments to those who would qualify for up to £4 a week , would help with initial back-to-work expenses .
28 The reasons for this dearth of activity may stem from a general lack of enthusiasm amongst Caledonian flyers ( I accept that it is a minority interest ) or , hopefully , from a lack of both events to stimulate interest or outlets for those who would wish to be involved .
29 Following the pattern of development of municipal law we will be able to outlaw self-help in the enforcement of international law , remove the weapons of violence from the hands of those who might break the law and ensure that no state is a judge in its own cause when it comes to questions of legitimate self-defence or disputes about allegations of aggression .
30 They are costly and highly dangerous in the hands of those who might use them for the destruction of life . ’
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