Example sentences of "the [noun] work [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 With superb research facilities and growing international demand for our expertise , CTL gives you the opportunity to work at the forefront of toxicological research .
2 One has transferred to the communications department and all were offered the opportunity to work for the new contract firm .
3 Alistair Scott and John Shrewsbury were kind enough to give me the opportunity to work with the BBC and I hope to have the privilege again .
4 ‘ He is not in good health , and he asks only that his nephew , Nathan , who is sixteen , shall be given the opportunity to work with the firm , starting at the lowest rung of the ladder , to learn the publishing business thoroughly .
5 Where carers admit that abuse has occurred , or are fearful that it may , the worker may have the opportunity to work with the carer ( and where possible , the old person ) on a future strategy .
6 Her role in Selling Hitler offered Julie , one of five children , the opportunity to work with the director Alistair Reed .
7 After all , becoming a provisional member of Equity does n't give them work , it merely gives them the opportunity to work in the career for which they have trained .
8 As an organisation the Trust owes much to the tourist industry and it welcomes the opportunity to work alongside the regional tourist boards and the travel trade .
9 Pigs too were taken to sanctuaries to recover , as the RSPCA worked at the farms for days on end , work which eventually cost the RSPCA £15,000 .
10 The writer works at the impossible task of creating a poem , a narrative , which tries to narrow the gap between the signal and what is signalled : tries to reverse the separation between the world and what we write about the world .
11 Yet the government can not easily undo the damage wrought by the courts .
12 Floy remembered what Nuadu Airgetlam had said about the Robemaker taking sacrifice from the ordinary Irish people and putting the sons to work in the Dark Workshops and guessed that the people had simply lost heart .
13 Reduction of the hours worked for the full-time employees and not for the part-time employees would result in a financial advantage for the full-time employees .
14 Understandably , there was a tremendous variation in the hours worked on the farms with one well-established and organised family putting in a 28-hour week .
15 The hours worked in the early cotton mills varied .
16 The hours worked in the late 1970s were between a third and a quarter longer than those in all the other railways studied by the BR/Leeds team ( 1980 : 15 ) .
17 As a result , if the working week is shortened for full-time employees , the hours worked by the part-time employees must be reduced proportionally .
18 Daily scenes of confrontations outside the Grunwick works between the pickets and their supporters ( sometimes not members of unions at all ) and police cordons dominated television news coverage .
19 The Chaplain to the University works within the University in pursuing and promoting Christian ministry in all its facets .
20 Danny McStay and Welland Chu are the researchers working on the project .
21 The baker works in the back , you see , so he does n't show a light until he opens at six .
22 Assume , as ministers presumably believed , that it was fiscally essential to recover the deficit wrought by the recession .
23 The builders worked throughout the weekend , so with their hammering and concrete mixing and loud radios , it was impossible to ignore their presence .
24 In a traditional plant the engine , transmission , and axles are placed onto ‘ the track ’ — a chain-driven series of platforms which move continuously at a fixed pace while the operators work on the cars — and the painted body is lowered onto them .
25 But the " theatricality " of the play works beneath the purely formal level : Lord Claverton has always acted a role and it is only at the end of his life that he allows his true human self to emerge , although
26 The psychologist worked on the assumption that Dawn should prepare herself for a life of dependency on others , so he did not try to motivate her towards self-sufficiency .
27 Being asked how much the foresaid are worth per annum , he says with the pasture belonging to the maintenance of the animals working in the plough teams they are worth per annum £17 . "
28 The mind works on the body in strange ways ; an intense experience , a powerful dream .
29 The greater proportion of boys in the sample reflected more high scoring boys than girls being in the lower mathematics sets in the schools working with the project .
30 If schools feel that the National Curriculum does not get to the heart of the matter , that it is a relatively superficial means to more important ends and has important omissions , then is it not up to the schools to work through the National Curriculum or add to it to secure their goals ?
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