Example sentences of "[noun pl] who [verb] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The stark contrast between England 's win this time and their loss in the deciding one-day match on the same ground last February made a big impact on Kiwis who saw both .
2 I make allowances for old'uns who have rubber sharks in their cars : - )
3 He is consumed by the challenge of the world 's highest peaks , but this has been accompanied by a geographer 's fascination with visiting new places : a curiosity about the metaphysical undercurrents that accompany great risk ; a need to plumb the capabilities of mind and body and a corresponding empathy with mountain peoples who confront such tests in their everyday struggle with life .
4 The sample of groups used by Collier and Rosaldo , upon which they constructed their model , skewed the data ; for they were all peoples who place immense value upon' Man the Hunter and Warrior' , and who also elaborate ritually upon the violent , destructive , and fertile potential in men .
5 For it is an ethnic conflict , between peoples who see each other at close range .
6 Rovers suffered from something of a fadeout and we even had a number of home fans who felt inclined to boo .
7 Also , a few leeds fans who noticed some rangers fans in the crowd , actually wished them good luck for the rest of the competition .
8 ( The highspot for the 600,000 fans who flock each year to the Graceland mansion shrine is the famous jungle room , where their idol used to watch three televised football games at once ) .
9 The idea of European citizenship may , however , seem a little absurd for those English fans who spend most of their time abroad abusing foreigners and orchestrating international hooligan networks .
10 The hospitality was excellent and I can recommend it to all fans who feel starved of their rugby in late summer .
11 ‘ I was delighted for the fans who travelled 300 miles south to see us .
12 The former road turns beyond the lane junction and crosses the valley to Morvich , a farming settlement in lovely surroundings with accommodation and camping for the many walkers who find this a convenient base for their mountain expeditions .
13 Our college 's initial provision for ‘ students with special needs ’ was established in 1978 — a ‘ discrete ’ course for students with moderate learning difficulties or , in some instances , school leavers from high schools who needed extra support before joining training schemes .
14 Second , and more briefly , I shall ask some questions about the relevance of the 1988 Act to the particular needs of pupils in our schools who have significant difficulties with learning , or whose behaviour or adjustment gives cause for concern .
15 The division of the national press into ‘ quality ’ and ‘ popular ’ papers was one of content as well as circulation , and it was itself largely a result of the higher advertising rates chargeable by the papers with readers who had more money to spend ( not necessarily their own ) .
16 ( Readers who doubt this should look at the bewildering array of welfare benefit leaflets in their local post office . )
17 Clearly contemporary readers who knew both books considered them connected .
18 In October we launched our new Subscribers ' Club for the many thousands of readers who take Ideal Home on subscription .
19 The successful candidate will be required to write news and feature articles directed at Fairplay 's readers who hold senior management positions .
20 Readers who book residential accommodation will be entitled to £20 discount per person , per night .
21 Serious errors , such as the two examples given , are usually corrected very quickly , but many newspaper readers who have personal knowledge of a news item find inaccuracies in reporting which are of less importance and which do not get corrected .
22 If we are concerned with readers who have sensory deprivation , or if we are confronted with unfamiliar alphabets — in the writer 's case examples of these would be Arabic or Japanese — there may be much preparation before the process can continue .
23 Where the sting is not a matter of general knowledge , its defamatory capacity is judged by its impact upon ordinary readers who have such knowledge — if the plaintiff can first prove that such persons were amongst the actual readership .
24 This leads me to believe that the encyclopaedia is comprehensive , although it may be more accessible to readers who have some minimal knowledge of the area they are investigating .
25 I would be very interested to hear from any readers who experience this effect , or who find even the presence of electricity disturbing .
26 The Independent can offer ten pairs of free tickets for Mon 9 Oct to the first ten readers who phone 01-436 0605 today ( between 10am and 10.30am only ) with the answer to the following question : which film is A Little Night Music based on ?
27 MIRROR readers who lost thousands of pounds when a holiday company went bust may get some money back .
28 Financial adviser Peter Hargreaves of Hargreaves Lansdown has produced a guide to Gilts which he will send free to Assets readers who call 0272 741 309 .
29 280 , the defendants , owners of a newspaper , carried an advertisement in each issue informing readers who wanted financial advice to write to a given address .
30 Reports of bad service and rude staff are alarmingly high , says the guide after following-up 1,000 complaints from readers who visited 567 pubs outside London .
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