Example sentences of "[verb] their [noun pl] [prep] new " in BNC.

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1 There were technicalities to handle and , above all , the management of time was important while heads and their deputies led their colleagues through new patterns of requirement .
2 The companies will also have the opportunity to build on existing business links and introduce their goods to new markets in the United States .
3 Just before the last talks were abandoned in November , the Unionists revealed their ideas about new north-south institutions , covering common topics like agriculture , which could have limited executive power .
4 There are now great opportunities for independent producers to sell their programmes to new television channels and international markets , and there is much greater choice for viewers as a result .
5 I show their photographs to new members when they join and they gaze , open-mouthed , at the transformation .
6 At the end of a long project there may be a difficult situation if functional managers in the meantime have staffed their departments with new members .
7 Many of them have to acquire language skills in order to service their clients in new market places .
8 Designers Jeff Banks and David Emanuel are both eager to put their signatures on new collections that offer flexibility , wearability and style
9 Before the days of portable recording machines which everyone could carry with them , record companies had to use great imagination to fill their catalogues with new and interesting material .
10 Opportunities for major fund-raising from other sources are very limited : partly because trust funds usually direct their resources to new short-term projects rather than to longestablished work , and partly because such trusts have been inundated with requests from other agencies suffering from withdrawal of Local Authority grants .
11 ‘ The spirits wander , ’ said Mrs Danby , ‘ and find their homes in new bodies . ’
12 In addition , Seaton Valley cleared most of the existing colliery housing in the existing pit villages and rehoused their residents in new developments in Cramlington .
13 Christian women who are studying their traditions for new interpretations are not helped by secular attempts to dismiss such traditions altogether .
14 Men such as Roger de Leyburne ( see plate 3.1 ) , the Kentish knight , or John of Hastings ( from Sussex ) , gave their names to new settlements in Aquitaine ( Libourne and Hastingues ) but never themselves settled in the bastides which still bear their names .
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