Example sentences of "[n mass] who have [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | The characteristic of a chattel slave is that he(she) has no recognized kin who have continuing rights and obligations by virtue of their kinship . |
2 | Actually , it just happened because I found I was engaging with people who had similar interests to myself . |
3 | ‘ And people who had nervous breakdowns about Robert Smith ! ’ shouts Niall . |
4 | There were also cutbacks in the numbers of beds provided and , as a result , some people who had major operations had been released from hospital after only three days . |
5 | He was a senior , dedicated member , and it did n't at first appear that he had committed any atrocities , but we later found out that he was responsible for denouncing people who had anti-Fascist sympathies , and that it was because of him that we had been taken to Tabiano . |
6 | People who had psychosomatic complaints were probably malingering ( if male ) and hysterical ( if female ) , and the appropriate treatment was a stiff talking-to , designed to exhort or scare them into ‘ stopping all this nonsense ’ and ‘ pulling themselves together ’ . |
7 | People who had low growth rates during fetal life and infancy have high death rates from ischaemic heart disease . |
8 | There were a few people who had private laboratories , and who were like Lavoisier amateurs of fully professional competence ; and there were those who lived by consultancy . |
9 | The aim was to confine attention to people who had frequent contact with the dementia sufferer , rather than interviewing all nearest relatives , who might or might not have contact with him or her . |
10 | We advertised for people who had previous experience so they could set the system up from scratch . |
11 | When in the 1960s poverty was ‘ rediscovered ’ in the UK , it became clear from research findings that those elderly people who had occupational retirement pensions derived from their previous employment were least likely to be living in poverty , as then defined . |
12 | My problems are precisely the same as my father 's , but the climate 's different now : in those days , people who had large houses were thought to be plutocrats who ran society , the Establishment if you like . |
13 | In one respect the Free Presbyterian Church was a valuable resource of the DUP in that it provided a cadre of people who had considerable training and experience in organization and oratory : the ministers and elders . |
14 | One of the chief pleasures was seeing the reunion of many people who had first-hand experience of travelling or working on the Line , and met against after many years . |
15 | Coun John Elders said : ‘ We would particularly like to hear from young people who have strong views on the facilities for them in Seaton and what entertainment could possibly be provided . ’ |
16 | If you talk to people in the street the majority of people who have young children are certainly saying we need day care , we need opportunities for ourselves erm and are quite prepared , some of them at any rate , to go and say that to their local councillors and to write to their M Ps . |
17 | Do we welcome into our midst those people who have developmental disabilities , on order that we can grow together in faith ? |
18 | The impact of the new legislation will be felt most for people who have complex needs identified as a result of a comprehensive assessment . |
19 | Group 1 — People who have automatic entitlement |
20 | Group 1 — People who have automatic entitlement |
21 | Group 1 — People who have automatic entitlement |
22 | Group 1 — People who have automatic entitlement |
23 | Group 1 — People who have automatic entitlement |
24 | I have come upon one or two cases of people who have acute sensitivity to electricity and to electrical devices , such as television sets , computers , radios , electric lights , etc . |
25 | All this is important , because young people who have good relationships with their parents are less likely to feel the need to try drugs . |
26 | When professionals who work in mental health services talk of an ‘ integrated , comprehensive , seamless service ’ they mean a service where acute hospital beds , hostels , group homes , community teams and services for people in their own homes , are all managed as one service with one team of people who have total responsibility . |
27 | The problem , as I began to discover over the years , does n't lie with the composer , it lies with the interpreters and what is expected from the interpreters by people who have dubious taste . |
28 | Erm , mental health referrals is partly demographic , partly social change , in that there is an expectation of dealing differently with people who have mental health problems , and there is also a very clear expectation of dealing differently with offenders who are leaving the , the prison system who have mental health problems , and there are pressures arising from both those areas , as well as the constant requirement for an enhanced provision on alcohol , substance abuse er , and , and similar factors . |
29 | Since this means essentially women , Brody ( 1981 ) coined the phrase ‘ women in the middle ’ to describe those people who have substantial responsibilities to both older and younger generations . |
30 | These groups are known by a variety of names , but the central idea is to bring together a small number of people who have certain interests or characteristics in common and to interview them as a group . |