Example sentences of "[noun pl] who have [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | I make allowances for old'uns who have rubber sharks in their cars : - ) |
2 | 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 . |
3 | 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 . |
4 | 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 . |
5 | Only clients who have specialist problems will come to bureaux and all those with less than ‘ two-hour ’ problems will effectively be shut out . |
6 | As he snipped several inches off the length of Aimee 's hair , he pointed out why he encourages all his clients who have fine hair to keep it in a short style — or at least above their shoulders . |
7 | We can accept no liability for clients who have insufficient/incorrect documentation . |
8 | They are a gesture of respect to clients who have particular interests . |
9 | In Jamaica , as well as tending the Governor 's household , he looked after many islanders who had great faith in him . |
10 | A linguistic " continuum " must ex hypothesi reflect a social continuum of speakers who have differential access to the " top " and " bottom " varieties . |
11 | Thus , speakers who have productive control of Dyirbal morphology tend not to use it in peer-group situations . |
12 | Subjects who had abnormal results for one or more of these parameters were regarded as having abnormal manometry . |
13 | The arts professional development teachers of the one LEA in the sample which had a cross-curriculum team looked enviously at colleagues in other curriculum areas who had national associations where they could meet to exchange curriculum and strategic information . |
14 | It is a process which enables people from tiny communities who have important ideas about how to make their communities , the nation , and the world a peaceful and humane home for mankind to translate those ideas into action . ’ |
15 | All the companies who have long-standing affairs with the DOS are still heavily committed to it . |
16 | And though at Arsenal the manager continued in the role of club supremo cast by Chapman , elsewhere — with few exceptions — it was still the directors who had general control . |
17 | In which case it will be able to re-discount the bill to similar institutions who have excess liquidity . |
18 | Elsewhere there is a preponderance of older lecturers who have heavy teaching loads , a discouraging success rate for grant applications , and a shortage of people actually to carry out the research , so physics departments have to be very determined indeed to maintain a thriving research programme . |
19 | In a later age the policy was taken up at Manchester United by Sir Matt Busby , who wrote : ‘ Look at the top when analysing clubs who have lasting success and there you will find the original cause of the happy effect . |
20 | Funny little things like the way he could find a mental case to confess to every gangland killing , and the number of prisoners who had sudden heart attacks while he was questioning them . |
21 | For homeowners who have negative equity — where the value of their house is less than the mortgage — the Chancellor ratified earlier proposals to make it easier for them to trade down . |
22 | Political decisions emerge from the interaction of groups who have conflicting objectives as well as mutually advantageous bargains to make with each other . |
23 | He said he had received five calls from angry parents or grandparents who had similar problems to the child portrayed on television . |
24 | ‘ The highest standards of personal morality are expected of bishops , clergy and all Christians who have personal responsibility for others . |
25 | It 's mainly the southern Italians who have dark eyes and olive skins . ’ |
26 | But in my case an exception was made , and girls from the year below mine were moved above me in House Order , as well as being made monitors who had special privileges . |
27 | The churches themselves began reorganizing their affairs , often removing those officials who had close contact with the previous regime . |
28 | She was most involved with social workers who had small children and this , like all her other groups , gradually came to include a wide range of professions . |
29 | Others identify the labour aristocracy as workers who have high earnings because they are employed by multinationals or foreign firms which , as Roxborough points out , is closest to Lenin 's original meaning ( Roxborough 1979 ) . |
30 | People living in the houses were also less likely to be in the company of individuals who had competing needs to their own ; clients living in staffed houses were likely to be the only service user in the room for 63 per cent of the time ( and mostly with just one other for the remainder ) , compared with 42 per cent in the three ‘ campus ’ houses , 33 per cent in ordinary hospital wards and 27 per cent in special units . |