Example sentences of "[prep] [pers pn] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 He 's worried about them the whole time .
2 ‘ But I never felt remorse about them the same way I did about him .
3 ‘ They are looking fresher and bouncier , and I just sense there has been a lot more energy about them the past 10 days .
4 Anyone in late eighteenth-century London who was anxious to ‘ insure the removal of barrenness ’ or ‘ improve , exalt , and invigorate the body and through them the mental faculties of the human species ’ , need not have looked further than the Temple of Health where Dr James Graham had constructed what he modestly termed his ‘ medico-magnetico-musico-electrical bed ’ .
5 Their retail branches are a fixed cost , so the more business they put through them the better .
6 Housman pays strict attention to these prosodic and structural emphases , conveying through them the Horatian sense of addressing the imagined bystander .
7 Not for them the traditional lunchtime saunter down to the pub , then off to the match with their mates .
8 Indeed , most of their problems spring from the fact that for them the two functions are deeply connected .
9 Not for them the hollow reply , ‘ What meeting ? ’ when a call is made to check that they are bringing something to the pot luck supper at school that very evening .
10 But enough carousing and photographing … would I mind , my Tasmanian countrymen asked , taking the World Cup back to Sydney for them the following morning ?
11 She was surprised by the extent of Sue 's gratitude , when she came looking for them the following evening .
12 For them the Imperial Sun shines on undiminished !
13 For them the critical starting date in human history was the one in 1896 when British law was changed to allow motor-cars to be driven without a man preceding them on foot carrying a red flag .
14 For them the skilful use of mass media may be important , and key contacts in positions of power will be a great help .
15 There was a car waiting , but because of the fog they abandoned the idea of driving down and went to the railway station , caught a train with minutes to spare , picked up the car that was waiting for them the other end , rang the studio from the car phone to let them know where they were , and ran into London Weekend Television .
16 Five year students , they gave a party for them the other evening about fifty of them must have turned up .
17 Homework is done by women whose role as unpaid caretakers of a nation 's dependents forces them out of the competition of the job market , and , still needing to earn , into work which is desperately tedious , which has to be carried out in isolation , thus losing for them the only element which makes tedious work bearable — the cameradie of the factory floor .
18 For them the Social Charter and its accompanying action programme offer the way forward .
19 They were temporary , not permanent , migrants : not for them the single journey to a new land .
20 If our young girls are to learn the profession , let them serve a seven years apprenticeship and when they have completed it , I ask for them the same wages as are paid for journeymen …
21 the first test for them the giant slalom … a three quarter of a mile long downhill race … just like ski-ing … and after the downpour this morning it was just as slippy for the bikes …
22 the first test for them the giant slalom … a three quarter of a mile long downhill race … just like ski-ing … and after the downpour this morning it was just as slippy for the bikes …
23 Not for them the sudden exhilaration of Crick and Watson on discovering the structure of DNA ( a rare thrill , even in the natural sciences ) .
24 Not for them the purposeless Irish custom of the kick upfield which might , with a bit of luck , blunder into touch and ‘ everything can stop for tea ’ .
25 Not for them the comfortable life ; they might get ideas above their station , which was to devote themselves to hard labour and be grateful for small mercies .
26 For them the whole range of feelings of shock , disbelief and anger come into play .
27 These caches usually consist of single prey species , and if the predator does not return for them the resulting bone assemblage should consist of more or less complete skeletons from one or a limited number of species .
28 For them the vital issue of racial identity confusion does not exist .
29 The chief executive or clerk of a local authority is always anxious to assist members by giving and obtaining for them the fullest information for their work .
30 Between them the two major planks of the strategy had yielded £5,264,500 .
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