Example sentences of "[noun] [pron] [verb] many [noun] " in BNC.

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1 In these respects I had many discussions with Guevara , who himself disclosed his loss of marxist illusions .
2 To understand why Jews should be so possessive about a collective tragedy which touched many others , it is necessary to remember that this was mass murder specifically designed for Jews in which others were caught .
3 Although at the end of Bair 's lengthy work a number of contradictions and conflicts do remain , this is nevertheless a meticulously researched study which provides many insights into de Beauvoir 's world .
4 What will the right hon. and learned Gentleman do to protect schools which have many students with special needs , especially students who are not statemented but who are seen to have special needs ?
5 In many translations , the words at the start of verse 17 appear as ‘ the man of God ’ , and those are words which echo many passages about the prophets in the Old Testament .
6 Complex subjects , like multi-word terms , may require labels which contain many words .
7 One librarian felt so hard up that she had begun looking for bargains at car boot sales — ‘ Adrian Mole in mint condition for 20p ’ — a practice which raises many questions about funding our schools .
8 In six months which included many business trips , they were never apart for one night .
9 Although an initial brain scan showed nothing to suggest she might have epilepsy , she demanded further tests and was finally diagnosed as having temporary lobe epilepsy a condition which plagues many schoolchildren .
10 ‘ One of the cruellest had a girlfriend who had many friends involved in the struggle against the regime and he would go with her to cafes , where they would sing songs against the dictatorship . ’
11 He matured into a distinguished mathematician who enriched many branches of the science before he died at the age of only 44 from a ruptured appendix .
12 As a result they suffered many casualties .
13 I mention them briefly because among management trainers they have many aficionados ; they are written about more fully elsewhere .
14 Now that the partisans were well organized in the Province of Parma they committed many acts of sabotage .
15 To those with no operational experience such as MPs , Courts of Enquiry , magistrates etc. , it can appear a sensible and foolproof system , but in practice it has many deficiencies .
16 Mill 's ‘ harm-to-others ’ principle seems simple , but in practice it has many problems .
17 Consequently they underinvest in long-term projects which take many years before they yield a positive return .
18 Thus Marx 's model of historical development was in many respects only a sketch which left many problems unresolved .
19 This was not considered in the above example , and will increase the costs of arbitraging an index which contains many companies .
20 He will be far more explicit , since he is free of the legal shackles which cause many reports to appear so emasculated .
21 The losses have now been eliminated in a major reorganisation which involved many redundancies .
22 The menopause is an experience which causes many women considerable anxiety .
23 In a decision which surprised many commentators , none of the sons and daughters of top party leaders ( the so-called " princelings " ) were elevated to the central committee .
24 Western society places the highest value on the most abstract , thus creating an elitism which means many people feel alienated from mathematics , and , apart from small groups , feel it has little to do with their lives .
25 A lady I knew many years ago designed knitted suits and so on at the drop of a hat .
26 The issue which faces many firms is defining what management information it needs , then producing the information in a format which is understandable and useful .
27 The old test-piece Pepsicomane , a hard 6b , locates the sector which contains many classics of 5c/6a : Franco-Belge , Marabunta , Touloum and others .
28 For example , HARPY uses a finite-state machine which allows many sub-parts of an utterance to be treated as a self-contained recognition problem .
29 This approach has been highly successful with the thalassaemias , a group of disorders which bear many similarities to sickle cell disease .
30 Edwin Stephenson , who played for Yorkshire between 1858 and 1873 , was one of the youngsters who spent many hours ‘ pegging ’ away , bowling at Sampson on the Broomhall pitch .
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