Example sentences of "live [prep] their " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Alex Gair ran through choking smoke to telephone his grandfather , Mr Gerry Gair , who lives near their bungalow in Nursery Lane , Nutley , near Uckfield , Sussex .
2 His girlfriend Eleanor lives with their 18-month-old son Christopher at her parents ' home .
3 The courts have held that an LEA can not , however , refuse to admit a child simply because s/he lives outside their district .
4 Married for 31 years , Miss Clark spends much of her time at her flat in London 's Knightsbridge , while Mr Wollf , who is also her manager , lives at their home in Paris .
5 Tom now spends most of his time in Los Angeles while Lynda lives at their mansion in the Vale of Glamorgan .
6 I am lonely yes , but my loneliness is the price I pay in order that the people of the World may look ahead to peace and freedom and to a decent standard of living for their children . ’
7 Mrs Thatcher , speaking on Panorama ( 25 January 1988 ) , said that her constituency is that of those who are working ‘ for an increased standard of living for their own families ’ ( not , we should note , for others ) .
8 Had n't he studied in France and seen the men of this supposedly superior civilization living amid their mighty machines and their great institutions ?
9 While living amongst their intended victims they brazenly plot to catch them , all the while lying and playing tricks .
10 So , for example , Salah and Bil Hasan , brothers living with their wives in one household , with their own private rooms and kitchens , always ate in the common courtyard , on neutral territory ; and each wife in turn prepared the meal , rigidly observing the rota even if her husband was absent .
11 The greater incidence of widowhood among women of this age means a much lower proportion living with their partner than is true for men , and a much increased likelihood both of living with children/children in law , and of living alone .
12 Over one in eight ( 12% ) of all lone mothers are living with their own parents .
13 All the same , if we turn the figures about and look at them from the point of view of the older generation themselves , we still find that in early modern England only 10 per cent of sixty-year-olds were living with their married children or grandchildren .
14 Some older people dread the idea of moving out of their own homes , while others would enjoy being near or actually living with their relatives .
15 Admittedly there was more than a hint of urban overcrowding two doors away from William at no. 21 , where a glove cutter , a walnut-veneer repairer and a book finisher were living with their families — but that was exceptional .
16 William and Mary Ann Titford are living with their family at no. seventeen .
17 The married couple 's allowance , which is currently £1,720 , was introduced in 1990/91 with the advent of independent taxation and is given to married men living with their wives .
18 In the youngest age group , 65–69 years , most elderly people are living with their spouse , 37 per cent as one of a married couple whose partner is over 65 , and 20 per cent with a partner under 65 .
19 In 1982 , 7 per cent of all children ( 809 000 ) were living with their natural mother and a step-father ( OPCS , 1982 ) .
20 Such figures do not of course reflect variation in household constitution : Bangladeshi households were typically extended either longitudinally ( over three generations ) or laterally ( two or more brothers living with their wives and children ) .
21 We know that in general women who have been married ( that is , separated divorced or widowed ) are more likely to be living with their own parents than those who currently are married ( Martin and Roberts , 1984 ) .
22 He applies it to the particular case of young people living with their parents after marriage , by arguing that in the expanding industrial towns there was every opportunity for young people to be wage earners and therefore to be net contributors to the parental household , at a time when wages were at a very low level .
23 The point that I am trying to make is that the experience that they are gaining , by working and living with their people , day in and day out , will give them a depth of understanding which , sadly , no amount of university training would give .
24 The GHS survey reported that two-thirds of carers were not living with their dependant .
25 Forty-three per cent are fathers ( not necessarily living with their children ) , and 52% currently live in households which do not include children .
26 Never mind the divorce statistics , an encouraging 92% of those married , or living with their partners , said they are still in love .
27 Previously those living with their parents would have been expected to continue living there .
28 The proportion of unmarried mothers living with their parents declined from 49 per cent in 1973–5 to 30 per cent in 1983–4 , with a corresponding increase in those living in their own home from 36 to 59 per cent over the same period .
29 Because they live longer , women over 65 are much less likely to be living with their spouse than men of a similar age .
30 We may then wonder why B 's children are not living with their father , wonder whether the exigences of his professional life , or of his relationship with the children 's mother , constrains him to live apart from them .
  Next page