Example sentences of "who [vb -s] [prep] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I 've fallen for a boy who goes to the same school as me , but is two years younger than I am .
2 Charlie Swan rides Novello Allegro and also Castlina , a recent Navan winner who goes for the three miles handicap hurdle on the opening day .
3 EIGHT hours of athletics at Bebington on Saturday will go a long way to deciding who goes on a two-day trip to Blackpool next month .
4 Wycombe and Colchester each have seven games left to decide who goes into the Fourth Division next season .
5 He explained that what makes the document confidential is the fact that the creator of the document has used his brain and thus arrived at a result which can only be produced by somebody who goes through the same process .
6 Also racing in Holland is Liverpool Women 's 10k winner Suzanne Rigg ( Warrington AC ) , who goes in the 10,000 metres .
7 For 22 years , North Down has been the personal bailliwick of James Kilfedder , the former speaker of the ill-starred Northern Ireland Assembly and an independent Unionist who sits on the Conservative benches in the House of Commons but without the party whip .
8 Amer Midani , the wealthy Lebanese businessman who sits on the United board , is still favourite to eventually take over the club , and to install Bobby Charlton as chairman .
9 But tell me , the English lady who sits with the peculiar gloves drinking sherry wine with your colleague .
10 Throughout the meeting he has been observing one student , possibly in his thirties , who sits in a long wheelchair with his legs straight , parallel with the floor .
11 The kind who sits in a little island in the middle of a highly polished marble floor , looking gorgeous and untouchable , but … ’
12 Something about the gondola itself which is , after all , only Venice made manifest in the craft of the shipwright metamorphoses almost everyone who travels in it ; especially everyone who sits in the posher seat , the one with its back to the gondolier .
13 Steve Powell , who plays for the away team said : ‘ Obviously , the prison team can only play at home but they are anxious to play more friendly matches . ’
14 These machines are chess-playing calculators ; even the weakest is better than the average chess player ( someone who plays at the median strength of all those who know the rules ) .
15 As for who plays in the second half , that could depend on this afternoon .
16 Former Coventry boss John Sillett spotted the Ndlovus — along with a third brother who plays in the German league — when City played Zimbabwe on tour a year ago .
17 SEVENTEEN-YEAR-OLD James Spreng , captain of Stewart's-Melville XI , and his brother , Gerald ( 15 ) , who plays in the same side , have been selected for the Under-18 and Under-16 Scotland squads respectively for the home schools ' internationals in Cork at the end of next month .
18 Matthew Truskett , who plays in the national youth orchestra , hopes to study music in a big way and become a violinist ; Janine Peacock , who was principal cellist in the national children 's orchestra , recently played solo in a concert at Stockton Parish Church ; and many others have won singing prizes .
19 Julie Champagne , 18 , who belongs to a no-sex club in Ontario says : ‘ We think ‘ no sex ’ is better than ‘ safe sex ’ .
20 ‘ A very important person , who belongs to a royal family , has sent me to ask for your help , ’ he went on .
21 " It 's just a matter of remaining possessed by Arjuna , who belongs to the Upper World , " he told us .
22 There is no twentieth-century master who belongs to the second half of this century .
23 But press officer for Jet , John Maple , who belongs to the same union as Mr Keeping , says that there are statutory reasons why this morning 's protest may have been in vain .
24 They convey to someone who belongs to the same culture a lot of information about the person who is wearing or carrying them .
25 Tord Haraldsson from Alingsas , who belongs to the investigating task force , said that similar assaults in Denmark and the US have turned out to be sectarian rituals , where fanatics have been drinking horses ' blood to gain strength .
26 So the Christian who glories in a non-rational basis for his faith leaves himself vulnerable to a particularly lethal blow which strikes at the very foundation of faith .
27 As the story of a white woman who rides into the Mexican mountains to be sacrificed , naked and unprotesting , to the god of the Indians in order to maintain for them ‘ The mastery that man must hold , and that passes from race to race ’ , this piece , particularly when contrasted with Sweeney Agonistes , makes clear the essential difference between Eliot 's interest in the savage and that of Lawrence .
28 The traveller who rides on a local bus can learn a lot : in the mountains of Greece everyone clings on for dear life and makes the sign of the cross at every bend in the road ; in the Thar Desert , Rajasthan , a sense of humour is essential , especially when the giggling driver moves the sheltering bus to reveal squatting passengers answering the call of nature , and in South America it helps if you do n't mind sitting next to a chicken or sharing the floor with a goat .
29 ‘ One is the maid , who sleeps on the other side of the house .
30 Alternative approaches are reviewed by Franco Bianchini , who points to the potential role of an adequately funded arts programme in fostering civic pride and countering alienation , and Doreen Massey who emphasized the need for a combination of progressive national and local economic strategies .
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