Example sentences of "others ' [noun] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 Strauss 's annotations of Hofmannsthal 's libretto are discussed in detail , as is the harmonic structure of the opera which Gilliam identifies as tonal , thus supporting others ' views that Strauss 's next opera , Der Rosenkavalier , was not such a change of tack as it is often represented to be .
2 have respect for others ' views and feelings .
3 Their models are their own or each others ' motets and chansons and the chansons of such Parisian colleagues as Claudin de Sermisy , and they make fuller use of the whole polyphonic complex of the model than their predecessors had done : how flexibly may be seen by comparing the opening of the Kyrie of Clemens 's already mentioned Mass ‘ Misericorde ’ : with that of his chanson ‘ Misericorde au martir amoureulx ’ : Bars 3–5 of the Kyrie are not the extraneous interpolation they seem to be ; they come from bars 18–20 of the chanson :
4 The third image pictures the state in liberal democratic societies as a corporatist network , integrated with external elites into a single control system : here talk of external control versus state autonomy is irrelevant , for state and economic elites are so interpenetrated by each others ' concerns that no sensible boundary line or balance of influence can be drawn .
5 The object of the exercise … was not to enhance others ' enjoyment and understanding of Jane Austen , still less to honour t e novelist herself , but to put a definitive stop to the production of any further garbage on the subject .
6 John Sutphen suggests that with the three sonar channels available to dolphins , cetaceans can see-read-hear into each others ' hearts and brains .
7 Conversation can be generated by pupils using drill and practice software as well as database programs , in that the pupils often use each other as a resource for learning , drawing upon each others ' preknowledge and experience .
8 The drama might be unfocused , but we can now ask each group to look at the others ' work as examples of what 's going on elsewhere in the street .
9 He rarely wondered about others ' lives except where they touched his ; his mind was perpetually occupied with his own concerns .
10 It does not take into account that in a group of nursery children each will be happy to play with the others ' toys until stopped by peer group pressure .
11 Ethologists have offered a good deal of cross-cultural evidence , usually in the form of pictures of infants seizing each others ' toys and pushing each other about in sandpits , to support the view that the tendency to direct unprovoked action upon another person is at least universal , even though there is nothing in the evidence to suggest a unique origin for the tendency .
12 Some children brought up in institutions are so damaged by these experiences that they can not live in a family where they have to respond to others ' feelings and may escape into work in an institutional setting .
13 This might lead to the assumption that they are less sensitive to others ' misunderstanding than are adults .
14 If more magazines published such articles we could learn from others ' experiences and take steps to help all victims of this eternal triangle .
15 Apart , they could be breathtakingly sharp on the others ' shortcomings but together their individual selves gathered into something very close to a single presence .
16 She used not to be so censorious of others ' behaviour but her own betrayal had , she thought , seared her more than she understood .
17 But even when the shuttle she was on turned back to answer the mayday , she made sure her disguise — patterns of others ' skin and hair , eyes and voice and figure — yes , she had to make sure her disguise held , and deny her longing to be cleansed in the fire .
18 She made the clothes , baked , cooked , brewed beer and sold it , made butter and sold it , decorated others ' houses , took in others ' washing and brought up her remarkable family with little help from her husband , often penniless a few hours after getting his wage packet , a greater child , perhaps , than any of her own .
19 He refused to sit in a wheelchair , crippled by his disability and others ' prejudice and he taught himself to walk again , built up his stamina by playing football on crutches and progressed to the walking sticks he uses today .
20 Hour after hour the legions marched past , walking as much over each others ' bodies as over the ground , while I waited for the queen .
21 There is the potential for several wards to share ideas and to develop broader understanding of each others ' specialisms and problems while building valuable resources in the form of teaching aids and expertise .
22 And there they 'd be chatting across to one another or come to each others ' doors and h you know pass time of day having a little chat about one thing and another .
23 The reality is that we are conservative in our appreciation of others ' abilities and we are reticent and uncertain about our own .
24 What I wish to argue here is that far more could be gained from a serious study of others ' methods and findings .
25 A by-product of the computer revolution has been an increased understanding by scientists and humanists of each others ' methods and preoccupations .
26 The intention therefore is significantly different although both are concerned with presenting oneself as an object of others ' attention and finding a public language to do so .
27 ‘ Chubby ’ Eliot and self had a bit of a dogfight for a while trying to get on each others ' tails as we were not certain the other was not a 109 until we saw the roundels . ’
28 I was still off the chain so could at least go to the little bathroom and fill the others ' water-bottles and empty their pee-bottles .
29 Men and women alike listen to others ' ideas and sympathise with their problems .
30 The ABN is a method for the larger firms of accountants to market their own opportunities to the others ' clients and contacts .
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