Example sentences of "and [pron] [vb -s] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The Minister tells us tonight that everything is hunky-dunky and everyone gets the money to which they are entitled .
2 After the prayers the curandero ritually burns coca leaves on the fire and everyone leaves the enclosures for a feast of specially prepared local food .
3 ‘ START 2 is not going anywhere until START 1 is ratified by everyone and everyone joins the NPT as a non-nuclear state , ’ laments an American official .
4 They 're ideal for people by themselves , and everyone enjoys the framework of social activities we arrange .
5 Everyone has a right to first-rate care and everyone has the right to complain if they 're not satisfied .
6 It 's a free country and everyone has the right to be mind-numbingly stupid if they want , and subsequently I suppose it 's better if they can avoid killing themselves as a direct result .
7 Everyone has a right to first-rate care and everyone has the right to complain if they 're not satisfied .
8 and , and I puts the insurance money every month and they take it out , I do n't touch the blasted thing now
9 My companion leaps from his seat and himself shoots the scene with his Bolex .
10 There is a sturdy aspect to these performances which is most attractive and which suits the music .
11 Under the wide distribution of in-service funding , decisions will be local about which courses should be organized and sought from other people ( from local authority advisers , educational consultants or higher education ) and which courses the teachers of the school or group of schools which holds the purse-strings should be asked or encouraged to attend .
12 A useful feature of Halsbury is the ‘ Destination Table , ’ which will be found at the end of some consolidating Acts and which enables the provisions of the Act to be traced back to earlier legislation .
13 Against this monologic Amis can be set , by way of alter ego , the modernistic Amis of Barbara Everett 's discussion of Difficulties with girls , which occurred in the course of an essay on Hugh Kenner 's fantasy of a British betrayal of Modernism , and which springs the surprise of conveying that Amis , so often supposed an enemy of Modernism , is really a Modernist .
14 On the other hand , there is the approach which views mergers as highly undesirable and which doubts the claims made about efficiency improvements made as a result of mergers .
15 This is very much in evidence in Marguerite Duras 's L'Amant ( 1984 ) , which began as a commentary on an album of family photographs and which dramatizes the fragility of identity and the textualization of recollection .
16 The type of information and the purpose of the exercise of database creation may mean different things but underlying these examples , there is a general concept central to all — that of using a microcomputer to store information in a way which provides rapid , flexible and specific access and which meets the needs of potential users .
17 The Free Churches have made much use of the explosion of hymn writing which has occurred during the last thirty years and which crosses the boundaries of all denominations .
18 Mercedes-Benz , which originally developed airbag technology and which fits the US size bag as standard to all its products in the UK , argues that even if the full size bag is triggered accidentally , the inflation and deflation cycle is over so quickly that the driver does not lose control .
19 When executed by humans with a sound knowledge of a subject and its terminology , free language indexing can result in an index which is both consistent in the assignment of index terms and which matches the perspective of index users .
20 Is it not a British peculiarity , this combination of public prudery with extreme puriance , extreme interest in sex and devious at that , and which fills the newspapers whenever public events give them an opportunity .
21 They present a critical agenda involved in a current cultural confrontation — questioning the ideological partiality of a neo-conservative critical perspective , which apparently refuses to confront the terms on which it asserts its authenticity and which limits the range of cultural artefacts it will admit as civilised discourse .
22 It overlooks the fact that it is the public character of science and of its institutions which imposes a mental discipline upon the individual scientist , and which preserves the objectivity of science and its tradition of critically discussing new ideas .
23 A huge warehouse that 's nearing completion at Thurrock in Essex , and which offers the kind of discounts already enjoyed by millions of Americans .
24 The essential details needed are farm holding number , business location , fields and their sizes , what is in them and which schemes the farmer is applying for .
25 He , too , is presented with a description of his appearance , dress , behaviour and character that is clearly an exercise similar to the drawing of Alison , and which encourages the comparison of the figures thus drawn .
26 An emphasis upon such occasions , taken in conjunction with the opinion surveys , could lead to the son of conclusion proposed by Shils and Young ( 1975 ) : the British people love their monarchy and this love is expressed during coronations and suchlike ceremonies with an intensity which borders on the mystical and which strengthens the sense of national community .
27 Norwich-trained Paul John , now of the Manchester-based Book Art Project , offers his extended pop-up Dance Book to set alongside Dan Harvey 's third variation on The Living World , where he has planted grass seeds in an old Bible which is appropriately open at Matthew 13 and which tells the parable of the sowing of the seed .
28 These are just two of the many examples which could be quoted of the controlling and interacting forces at work in nature and of the subtle interlinking with occurs throughout the natural world and which maintains the state of order on this planet .
29 It is possession of this kind of power that gives rise to a distinct need for justification , and which forms the basis for the claim that companies must be required to act in the public interest .
30 May we have a debate on junk mail as soon as possible , to discuss a mailshot sent to many of my constituents by an organisation that is partly funded by Maxwell money which is so full of falsehoods that it would make the average time-share salesman blush ; which redefines the term ’ junk mail ’ and peddles dodgy , old-fashioned and out-of-date remedies which have been banned in most countries and which have passed their sell-by date ; and which bears the signature of an obscure Welsh politician , best known for losing his rag with Zimbabwean soldiers and for nutting people in public lavatories ?
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