Example sentences of "with [art] [noun pl] and [noun] who " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Verbal reports always precede written reports in any case ( on the grapevine ) , thus making written reports redundant along with the managers and secretaries who waste precious time writing them .
2 Japan was by now fully in league with the Germans and Italians who were forcing their eastern ally into action against British territories in the Far East .
3 They were the schools attended by the children of parents able to pay a modest but not negligible fee , together with the boys and girls who had by their own ability won a free or subsidized place .
4 Serious hunting began in the early nineteenth century , when tiger shooting became an obsession with the maharajas and nabobs who quickly passed the mania on to the British officials and army officers .
5 Now , as they left the shuttle lounge at Heathrow , mixed in with the commuters and shoppers who had come down for the day , Adam saw the tail .
6 She had never given him any reason to feel suspicious , and she certainly never encouraged any impropriety with the carmen and dockers who came regularly into the dining rooms .
7 Some readers of Practical Fishkeeping probably believe that we are tightly in league with the manufacturers and retailers who advertise in this magazine .
8 He spent a great deal of time in the yard below with the carpenters and masons who were making the pageant cart for the coronation procession .
9 It is very possible to sympathize in good part , if not entirely , with the psychologists and philosophers who were sceptical or uncertain of the worth of introspection as a source of knowledge , reluctant to attempt to deal with the unquantifiable , keen to be in accord with certain principles of scientific methodology , resistant to such free speculation as the Freudian kind , and who thus took the step of analysing ascriptions of consciousness into claims about no more than behaviour .
  Next page