Example sentences of "[conj] [art] [noun pl] ' own " in BNC.

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1 This ‘ lock and key ’ relationship has led to the view that the enzymes ' own structure must of necessity be unique and unchanging , and so it is — usually .
2 ensure that the printers ' own security procedures are sufficient .
3 The Authors jointly and severally warrant that the Company has the unfettered right to authorise the publication of the Work ; that the Authors ' own contributions to the Work are original and contain no libellous , defamatory , obscene or otherwise unlawful or misleading matter ; and that all statements therein purporting to be facts are true .
4 15.1.1 it has the unfettered right to authorise the publication of the Work ; that the Authors ' own contributions to the Work are original and contain no libellous defamatory obscene or otherwise unlawful or misleading matter and that all statements therein purporting to be facts are true
5 In most recorded ‘ adoptions ’ , the new fry were smaller than the parents ' own offspring .
6 It is now possible for a GIS to incorporate databases from many sources , while in the near future developments in networks will mean that remote access to databases at institutions other than the users ' own will become possible .
7 Another influence was The Girls ' Own Paper , which he liked much better than the Boys ' Own version .
8 To investigate this pattern , the researchers transferred fry in the study stream to 25 pairs and , sure enough , only fry the same size or smaller than the pairs ' own offspring were accepted into the fold , while larger fry were eaten or driven away .
9 Large sums spent on cosmetic surgery to obscure the aging process and the spenders ' own mortality is best evidence of this trend .
10 In a sense they had little alternative on account of Israel 's refusal to accept the return of the refugees and the refugees ' own outright refusal of resettlement .
11 Once this link is established Mrs Shott is asked to consider a residential placement and the parents ' own anxieties about their family situation and needs are used to justify the proposal being put forward .
12 We can look at the relationship between perceptions of paper bias and the electors ' own partisanship amongst ‘ readers of right-wing papers ’ , though it has to be remembered that different Voters are Evaluating different individual papers .
13 By this time Gordon Sloan , a Reporter from Strathclyde Region , had been brought in to do the work in Orkney , as the islands ' own Reporter , Mrs Katherine Kemp , was still under suspension , and the details of her case were lying on the Secretary of State 's desk in Edinburgh .
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