Example sentences of "[to-vb] [adv prt] [prep] their own " in BNC.

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1 It has been designed to be of value and interest to all grades of nurses who may wish to work through for their own interest and professional development .
2 ‘ The clothes were fit to stand up on their own , they were that stiff with dust and grease .
3 At least education has given people confidence to stand up for their own rights ’ .
4 Every social worker has a responsibility to stand up for their own profession , to accept criticism humbly when it is due , and to explain why things are done in certain ways .
5 It may happen when parents have indoctrinated their children , that is , laid down a set of beliefs without allowing the children freedom to think for themselves and to come up with their own reactions .
6 European manufacturers are afraid of getting left behind if the emerging handheld personal communicators generate a sudden rush of consumer excitement , and rather than wait for their labs to come up with their own local products , are weighing putting their names on one of the American products and manufacturing it locally .
7 DEC says it has no plans to licence its SVR4 work to other OSF/1 probables like Hewlett-Packard Co and IBM Corp , fully expecting them to come up with their own solutions in this area .
8 The suggestion was made that there should be community discussions with LEDU , that West Belfast people , in the absence of ideas from the IDB , are going to have to come up with their own ideas and develop them in conjunction with the universities , industrialists , and so on .
9 Training : Tax relief will be given to employers helping employees leaving their company to set up on their own .
10 The fourth phase of the development of headhunting may be identified as the splintering of individual consultants from existing firms , to set up on their own , such as Haley from Ward Howell and Egon Zehnder from Spencer Stuart , both in 1964 .
11 Ligachev argued that collective and state farms were still the backbone of the system and that most peasants did not want to leave them to set up on their own .
12 ‘ Women builders can work from our workshops and take on private commissions , if they want to set up on their own , ’ she said .
13 It is important to remember that there are risks attached to being kind to people in this state , and important also not to underestimate how difficult it may be for such people to reach out on their own .
14 His absorption with Mao and Castro was so open that the neighbors took it for a double bluff , and each new discovery of an agent transmitting messages from some ordinary-looking English suburb increased the tension of their interest in the land mine who was surely bound one day to go off in their own street .
15 Allow the viewers to look around on their own .
16 He said : ‘ As usual , the Government and their fellow-travellers are trying hard to slither out of their own responsibility for it .
17 The first is a request for the pleasure of their company while the second implies slight patronage , and highlights their inability to go out on their own and their need now to be ‘ taken ’ .
18 For Bob and Tessa 's house Jannie projected all the reconstruction and improvement which she and John had never found either money or energy enough to carry out in their own .
19 Advice to subject teachers to carry out within their own teaching programme .
20 Then gradually slip the open bag into the tank , and allow the fish to swim out in their own time .
21 Once a consensus had been reached , it had no legal standing , but Citrine expected the chairmen to go back to their own Boards and secure acceptance of the common policy .
22 Jean : She 's told some kids to go back to their own country .
23 Old Señor Freitas coughed , before he said , ‘ Sometimes señoritas have families who want them to go back to their own country . ’
24 Is their going to be lots of escapes and that sort of thing by people who do n't want to go back to their own country
25 He added : ‘ Players are not just training at club sessions , they continue to build up on their own .
26 So she took up their banner when she was Prime Minister , tempting people to start up on their own with tax and cash inducements .
27 I said for heaven sake girls , not only trying to cut down on the expensive just because obviously trying to start up on their own .
28 Yet ambitious and confident consultants , especially those good at business development and successful at winning shootouts , are still able to branch out on their own , and it would not be healthy for the industry if this were otherwise .
29 This is vital , for ultimately we want students to branch out on their own , to develop their own viewpoints , and not simply to imitate the views of the teacher bound to a particular research methodology or paradigm .
30 Graham Bowstead , Bob Hodgson and Ray Cargill , all Englishmen , had been working for William Lee in London but were on the look out for opportunities to branch out on their own .
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