Example sentences of "who [vb -s] [noun sg] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Thus , the ruwang , who transforms human to animal flesh , who transports it to earth , and then , after earthly kill , transforms the animal flesh into edible vegetable form ( see Overing Kaplan 1975 ) , is the greatest of all hunters .
2 who confronts grief with dignity of soul ,
3 Sir Wyn Roberts hangs on as Britain 's longest-serving minister of state because he is the only Tory MP who writes poetry in Welsh .
4 take on that job , you do n't have to be erm somebody who has knowledge about cloth , about way , the way things are made , the sewing , alright , how close it 's sewn to the edge
5 The essence of the offence of fraudulent conversion under [ the Larceny Act 1916 , section ] 20(1) ( iv ) ( referred to in paragraph 17 ) is misappropriation of property by a person who has possession on behalf of somebody else .
6 For Shirley , who has battle with asthma on a daily basis , the genetic research has no direct bearings yet , but for her children 's children , it could make better treatment , perhaps even a cure , a reality .
7 Billy Rock who has Listowel in mind for his smart and successful chaser Joey Kelly runs the gelding on Monday and he will go again at the next Roscommon meeting a fortnight later before travelling to Listowel where he might be worth an investment in view of that Galway win in July .
8 You have a client who has waiver of premium
9 Once again , there is considerable diversity to be found in the current pattern of who has responsibility for training and exactly what that responsibility entails in practice .
10 We need , therefore , to examine who has power within society and locate that within the context of the power of the state .
11 Field , who has doctorate in micropalaeontology , arrived in Angola from Milan where he was manager for BP Italy .
12 Any employee who has charge of Company property is responsible for taking all reasonable precautions in making sure that it is not lost , stolen or damaged .
13 Who wants glory in defeat ?
14 What Jeffery ( and Matza , who quotes Jeffery in support of his own position ) are pointing to here is that whatever positivists chose as the causes of crime , even when they were ‘ external ’ such as ‘ social and group ’ factors , they always excluded the nature and operation of the criminal law from consideration ; such things were simply not taken to be implicated in the process of causing criminal behaviour .
15 One who uses land by permission of the tenant or occupier ( i.e .
16 You can not counterfeit forty years ' honest work , or get the same result by being a clever young man who prefers vanilla to orange or heliotrope to lavender perfume .
17 It 's a rare character who commits murder in order to lose half a million pounds .
18 Remembering always that it is far better to announce that you are the ‘ Co-operative Funeral Service ’ to a person who may seek information regarding a memorial , than to announce that you are the ‘ Co-operative Memorial Service ’ to a person who requires information regarding funeral arrangements .
19 This person should whenever possible be the one who takes responsibility for counselling sessions .
20 Take for example a man who obtains land by deception .
21 A person who finds value in identification need not be attracted by Rousseau 's vision .
22 ‘ There 's a Russian story about a peasant who dreams night after night of having a bowl of cherry jam and no spoon to eat it with .
23 The first of the Philip Marlowe books sees our hero hanging tough among the broads , bimbos and gorillas — a hard-smoking bourbon man who eschews armour in favour of a belted mac and a fedora in which to play the down-at-heel knight errant .
24 Anyone who wishes information about bus services goes to a bus .
25 ( 1 ) No doubt everyone who sells property in exchange for a cheque intends to sell only in exchange for a valid cheque .
26 The teenager who can not find a job , the young mother with no one but toddlers to talk to , the active man forced to retire because of age regulations , the person who spends day after day doing the same repetitive work — all these people , and many others , may suffer from extreme boredom .
27 Thus it is clear that ( a ) affirms the footballer ; ( b ) also affirms the footballer because the speaker has made it clear that it is a personal reaction of liking or disliking which has nothing to do with appreciation of football 's being a good game ; ( c ) is affirming also because although criticism of the game is stated , its positive value comes first , and in any case the keen footballer is likely to be the first to agree that the level of enjoyment varies according to different games of football ; ( d ) however veers towards dismissal of football and therefore dismissal of what is meaningful to the footballer , because although it acknowledges that sometimes it is a good game the emphasis is on the negative side ; ( e ) is not affirming because even though the hurt to the footballer is cushioned by making it clear that this is a personal opinion , a very negative judgement is in fact articulated ; ( f ) has the straight effect of dismissing the footballer as well as football because it implies that anyone who spends time on football is stupid .
28 It had to be done , and he had known it would not be popular , but he added : ‘ Anyone who becomes Chancellor in order to be popular has chosen the wrong job . ’
29 Lord Fraser of Carmyllie switches from the post of Lord Advocate to become No 2 in the Scottish Office , replacing Mr Michael Forsyth , the Right-wing anti-devolutionist MP for Stirling , who becomes Minister of State for Employment .
30 They are Geoff Meads , who becomes director of primary and community care , and Jacqueline Kelly , director of purchasing and performance management .
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