Example sentences of "those [Wh pn] have [verb] a [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Can lead to cynical objections from users of The Rational ; can also spark resentment from those who 've purchased a Rational de Luxe .
2 During the sixth century , craftsmen were increasingly operating from workshops , employed by those who had made a greater success in the agricultural way of life and were able to support a greater number of specialists and farmworkers .
3 A point which may be relevant to this was that virtually all those who had made a positive choice of credit type did have bank accounts — a factor which clearly brings bank loans into the range of credit possibilities for people .
4 The brave heroes returned to an epidemic of influenza which all but carried off those who had survived a living hell .
5 However , those who had expressed a general interest in politics during the parliamentary mid-term were more likely to see bias on the television and in their papers early in the campaign .
6 The first excursion of the new government in foreign affairs was a bitter disappointment to those who had expected a real change in American policy abroad .
7 The children of women with schizophrenia followed up by Mednick and his colleagues ( 1981a ) who eventually developed schizophrenia were more likely to have had perinatal complications than those who had had a non-traumatic birth .
8 The students who , in the training trials , heard the buzz half a second before the shock , jerked their finger back more consistently than those who had had a longer gap between the buzz and the shock during training , and they did so much more markedly than those who heard the buzz at the time of the shock or after it ( see Fig. 24.1 ) .
9 The most successful weepers are those who have integrated a loving carer into their experience , so that even when they are weeping alone they do not feel abandoned or frightened .
10 Those who have to take a further qualification in English should make an early application to the relevant authority .
11 There are those who have made a close study of various aspects of platform life .
12 Amongst the many excellent and well researched books that have been written on the subject of bereavement the following are outstanding in their capacity to help those who have suffered a major loss : Grief and how to live with it by Sarah Morris ( published in 1971 by George Allen and Unwin ) ; A grief observed by C. S. Lewis ( published in 1961 by Faber and Faber ) — of particular interest to widowers — and Bereavement .
13 But the family sat on with the inertia of those who have travelled a long way and are reluctant to face the effort of arrival .
14 Also , various children deemed unsuitable for fostering — because of behaviour problems or physical handicaps , for example , or because there are strong ties with the natural parents — can be accommodated , together with those who have had a foster placement breakdown .
15 It is a shameless form of payola for those who have helped a political party to get elected .
16 They stress that the only farmers who can benefit from the immediate purchase of ewe premium rights are those who have submitted a 1993 claim for more sheep than they have quota and are buying or leasing retrospectively .
17 As a general nurse who trained in a large London teaching hospital , and qualified shortly before the demise of the General Nursing Councils and the introduction of the new statutory bodies for nursing , midwifery and health visiting , I have found listening to the reminiscences of those who have experienced a considerable career gap both salutary and frightening .
18 There are few things in the human condition more likely to create intrigue and speculation than the person who manages to progress through life without marrying , and those who have avoided a close relationship of any kind with the opposite sex arouse special interest .
  Next page