Example sentences of "who [adv] [vb base] [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 But in the middle are a group of ‘ innovators ’ who effectively abolish the underlying unit trust charges and instead impose a smaller initial charge which is coupled to a sliding scale of exit charges on the PEP , which disappear altogether after three years .
2 I think of some people who keenly desire a rational faith .
3 Who badly devour the edible breast — the musky silk
4 Transfer to the BA Hons Irish Studies is possible for students who successfully complete the first year of the Diploma of Higher Education in Irish Studies ( see page 151 ) .
5 Who greatly blame a freckled Hand ,
6 If the attempt to entice custom from people who only take a foreign holiday when it is ultra-cheap has been abandoned , they will be glad .
7 This program is the best of its kind on the market for page making facilities , it is far better than a number of ‘ Commercial ’ pagemaking programs that are popular with users who only have a dot-matrix printer .
8 To cut a long legend short , it 's about the bloody rivalry between two branches of a Hindu royal family — the five Pandava brothers , who all marry the same princess , and the 100 Kaurava brothers .
9 Social feelings arise , too , through identifications with other members of a group who all internalize the same ego ideal .
10 Raefnaeskol in Kalundberg in Denmark is able to offer holiday summer schools for visually handicapped pupils who are otherwise in ordinary schools but who apparently welcome the social interaction with other visually disabled pupils , whilst enjoying integrated schooling at other times .
11 If the Second World War is often regarded as the watershed of ‘ permissiveness ’ , then those with more educated tastes — who perhaps remember the precipitating crisis of the Public Order Act of 1936 and Mosley 's black shirts , or who might have read the descriptions of pre-war razor gangs in Graham Greene 's Brighton Rock — look back beyond the war before that , to the slumbering golden years of Edwardian England which is one of the most authoritative versions of the true location of the ‘ British way of life ’ .
12 It remains to be seen whether this aspect of TNC proposals will be sufficiently flexible to aid the transition of a section of the population who perhaps deserve the most attention in our common concern to raise levels of achievement and improve the quality of educational provision .
13 There are transitional thinkers — those who soon make the conceptual transition from the concrete to the more abstract form of the problem — one that is capable of being solved by a combination of multiplication and addition .
14 Funnily enough it 's not the people like me who usually do get the boot in academic life , it 's the people with real talent who generally have a hard time . ’
15 Ethnicity is not , however , always marked by linguistic distinctiveness , Labov 's work with Italian and Jewish speakers in New York City shows that such distinctiveness may persist for several generations , or conversely may disappear with the first generation of native-born speakers who nevertheless maintain a strong sense of ethnicity ( Labov 1972b : 281 ) .
16 If there 's money to be made though , developments will understandably blossom on every available acre of land , spoiling the countryside for all those who just want a little peace and quiet .
17 We get complaints from other traders who do n't want trading on a Sunday or from the public who just want a peaceful day .
18 Most of his patients are old people with lots of money who just want a little fuss made of them .
19 Four problem areas arise with visitors : ( a ) Rights of way Persons who lawfully exercise a private right of way are not treated as visitors and are therefore not covered by the 1957 Act ( Holden v White [ 1982 ] 2 WLR 1030 ) .
20 There is , of course , much talk in the developed world that one of the roles of education is selection — picking out for advancement people who best fit a certain mould .
21 Higher degrees are available to those who already hold a first degree ( especially a first-class or upper-second-class honours ) .
22 However , it is only open to those who already hold the overpriced asset and so relies on this group of investors trading sufficient assets to move the relative prices of the shares in the index and index futures back into line .
23 This is a one-year teacher-training qualification for those who already have a first degree .
24 The University offers excellent opportunities for further study to those who already have a first degree or equivalent qualifications .
25 Not primarily for foreign learners of English , but helpful in developing sensitive use of language for those who already have a good command of English .
26 On the other hand , there is no law saying that librarianship , or teaching , or media production , can not be learned at professional level by people who already have a professional accreditation in another field .
27 Secondly , priority needs to be given to establishing structures that will enable all general practitioners to be involved in influencing the views of the purchasing authorities , including those who have hitherto expressed little or no interest and those who already have a clear interest in participating .
28 For those who already have a settled partner , home and children , says Sheehy , the runway to 30 often leads to first infidelity .
29 Section B is for those who already have a fair knowledge of the language ; it aims to consolidate this knowledge and to introduce students to major authors and the elements of literary criticism .
30 A further concern about treating ulcerative colitis with cyclosporin is the carcinogenic risk in patients who already have an increased incidence of colonic dysplasia and carcinoma .
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