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

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1 The young teacher who goes from success at school to success at college and university ( like his/her Swedish or Russian counterpart ) is likely to take back into school as a teacher the assumptions which underpinned this personal success .
2 Is Klima , as the angry friend alleges on this occasion , a flirt , who goes from girl to girl ?
3 Back to his best Billy Lancaster , who goes from strength to strength each season , beat the talented Mark Jones , last year 's runner-up , by 21–16 , while Bob Severs was at his best to beat Michael Ryan 21–7 .
4 From 18 October until 22 November , Paszti-Bott are also showing a painter who plays with tradition in order to cast out in new directions .
5 The images are vivid : an unmarried mother who lives off welfare cheques ; a young man who drifts from girlfriend to girlfriend , selling drugs to get by .
6 ‘ You did n't think of your host , Monsieur Rodet , who depends in part on government work .
7 The first is a female spirit with long fair hair who travels from village to village by water , visiting farms and helping to tend cattle .
8 Some of the costs of driving fall on the owner , who pays in cash for fuel and in time and irritation for sitting in traffic jams .
9 Cantona , who relaxes by painting in solitude , can now take his place as a Renoir among the painters and decorators and fake impressionists of the English game .
10 By far the most effective arrangements presently available are those which : ( 1 ) provide for the continuing partners to have the option to acquire the share in the firm of an outgoing partner ( which overcomes the tax problems noted in Chapter 10 and offers some desirable freedom of manoeuvre to the continuing partners without ordinarily causing any disadvantage to the outgoing partner ) ; ( 2 ) finance the purchase of the share of a partner who dies before retirement by way of insurance effected on the lives of each of the partners the proceeds of which are declared to be held on trust for the partners for the time being ; ( 3 ) finance by endowment insurance the purchase of the shares of partners whose retirement can be predicted ; ( 4 ) ensure that in any case which is not or can not be sufficiently covered by available insurance ( eg payments to a partner who is expelled or who otherwise leaves the firm before normal retirement date ) payment of any capital sum is spread over a period so to reduce the burden on the continuing partners without imposing any great hardship on the outgoing partner or his estate ; and ( 5 ) impose on each partner an obligation ( Clause 14.02 ) to take out adequate ( as discussed with all the partners from time to time ) retirement provision for the benefit of himself and his familyso as not to impose any burden in that respect on the firm , which in former times would have accepted responsibility .
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