Example sentences of "people entering the [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The characteristics and attitudes of people entering the sector as owner/occupiers is considered to be especially important and is likely to mark this small business sector as unique in relation to other sectors .
2 They knew all the people entering the hall , and those that occupied seats close to them smiled and spoke to them .
3 A minimal barrier system requires people entering the animal area to remove their laboratory coats worn in other areas , and to put on protective clothing .
4 Unfortunately , the Museum and the Reading Room of the British Library Reference Division share a common entrance , so any simple count of people walking through either of the two entrances to the building would certainly give a correct number of people entering the Museum , but it would not be correct for genuine visitors to the Museum .
5 Can you remember where you were in the order of those people entering the flat ?
6 During the Belfast community studies , for example — and no doubt this experience is quite general — conversations were often interrupted by several more people entering the room .
7 As might be expected young disabled people entering the adult world of employment , housing and social life face even greater problems than their peer group .
8 The competition gives the young chefs of the future an opportunity to demonstrate their abilities before experienced professionals from the industry , who along with judging the competition , provide practical comment on how these young people entering the business can develop .
9 The fall in the number of young people entering the labour market because of the drop in the birth rate , combined with a rise in those going into further and higher education , will contract that source significantly .
10 Concern over the rising cost of public expenditure on pensions , and the shortage of young people entering the labour market , because of falling birth rates in the 1970's , may reverse the trend towards early retirement .
11 Changes percolate through gradually , much helped of course if there are major social and economic changes , such as the shortage of young people entering the labour market , which will inevitably open doors for women .
12 Future projections show a marked fall in the numbers of young people entering the labour market .
13 The fall in the birth rate in the 1970s means that the number of people entering the labour market today is falling .
14 This scheme is only one example of an increasing number of measures designed to attract women into and back to work as demographic changes show a decreasing number of people entering the workforce .
15 In concrete terms this means that people entering the workforce in recent decades , and especially since the early 1970s , have increasingly taken jobs in banks , offices , shops , restaurants , schools , hospitals and other service enterprises instead of following their parents into working in factories .
16 A study by the West Midlands Regional Management Centre found employers were generally unaware of the impact of demographic changes , particularly its effect on young people entering the employment market , and were failing to look beyond traditional sources of labour .
17 At the same time the downturn in the number of young people entering the employment market has emphasised the need for a greater proportion of young people with the skills which successful businesses will require .
18 Women will become increasingly important as prospective employees as the number of people entering the job market decreases and with the advent of a single European market .
19 The urgency of this investment was reinforced by demographic figures which showed that there were fewer and fewer young people entering the marketplace .
  Next page