Example sentences of "who have [verb] [prep] them " in BNC.

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1 This also gives information and current figures for other types of allowances which elderly people may be able to claim , such as those for the registered blind , allowances for the cost of a resident housekeeper ( relative or non-relative ) , and allowances for elderly people who are maintaining a daughter who has to live with them to care for them because of their age or infirmity .
2 Lone inventors are by no means all nutters , but we can sympathise with anyone who has to deal with them all the time .
3 Anyone who has spoken to them recently knows of the problems with which they have had to cope .
4 Such organizations have many other characteristics which anybody who has worked in them for any length of time will recognize .
5 It was an emotional parting , not only for the children , but also for the English volunteers who 'd looked after them .
6 It was an emotional parting , not only for the children , but also for the English volunteers who 'd looked after them .
7 The Incident happened in the 1930s when a Hartlepool couple were jailed for attacking a shop owner who 'd remonstrated with them for drinking out of the vinegar bottle .
8 It was the Winnipeg agent who had to go among them arguing ( he was Scotch too , and they could not quite understand it ) on the impropriety of dislocating the company 's traffic .
9 Mrs Langley , who had stood over them while he spoke , forbidding in burgundy taffeta and garnets , said she was sure they could amuse each other very well without her .
10 In these least months of 1978 almost all the golden people of Iran and international wheeler-dealers who had fed off them and with them have vanished — westward .
11 As two of the young survivors , Joanna Willis , 16 , and Marie Rendle , 17 , left Weymouth and District Hospital they exchanged hugs with the staff nurse who had cared for them .
12 This idea inspired knights from France to flock to the assistance of the struggling Christian kingdoms in northern Spain ; but there was clearly a nice distinction between the attitude of men north of the Pyrenees , who regarded the Muslim as the wicked infidel , as cattle for the slaughter , and the Christians who had lived among them in Spain and who regarded them as misguided fellow-humans .
13 Beyond swing doors were the babies : mended harelips , and small creatures who had constructed for them by human skill gullet or anal opening or separate fingers with which the working cells and DNA during their gestation had failed to provide them .
14 The purpose of the interviewing programme was to collect background information on the nature of the railways and their industrial relations , and to examine a number of key issues and events with the actors who had participated in them .
15 Though the Swan was more sophisticated than the Queen 's Head , it was only a matter of minutes before servants , ostlers and maids were scampering all over the large and comfortable hotel to see to the minutest needs of the ‘ Honourable Member of Parliament ’ , ‘ brother to an Earl ’ , who had landed on them at an unexpectedly late hour and naturally — ‘ a Colonel as well ’ — demanded the best of everything both for himself and for his ( temporary — ‘ from Keswick ’ ) servant and his ( ‘ pale-looking ’ ) daughter .
16 It was time they stopped designing buildings without a thought for the people who had to live in them , he said .
17 It was suggested in 1948 by two refugees from Nazi-occupied Austria , Hermann Bondi and Thomas Gold , together with a Briton , Fred Hoyle , who had worked with them on the development of radar during the war .
18 The defendant firm lawfully terminated the employment of the plaintiff who had worked for them for many years .
19 And Elizabeth knew who had paid for them .
20 Who had paid for them ?
21 Legal executive Liza , 24 , said the Bosnian army would not let 25-year-old boxer Senad Pezerovic , who had fought with them as a volunteer , travel to Austria to get a visa for Britain .
22 The anaesthetizing shock of the trenches was to bring about a delayed-action reflex for many who had fought in them .
23 A second set of trophies , the Thirsk Bowman 's Insignia , was presented in 1884 , after the death of Henry Peckett who had looked after them since the demise of that society .
24 Thus , the intellectual climate was transformed by refugees from the failed Paris Commune , and from Spain , Italy and Germany , who had brought with them their socialistic education , which led to the general practice of mutual aid among the immigrants — a practice little known to the people of Argentina' ( Juan Justo , in Aguilar : 1968 , p. 79 ) .
25 Except to Peter , of course , who had talked about them constantly .
26 We felt that if smokers were going to use smoking rooms phones would n't be covered and it would cause resentment amongst non-smokers who had to cover for them .
27 Who had forgotten about them and gone off , leaving all those trunks up there ?
28 The consensus that emerged about the teachers who had mattered to them was neither that they were strict nor that they were liberal , but simply that they were interested in them as people .
29 Winter-lets are not intrinsically bad , but they are ‘ symptoms rather than causes of insecure housing , chiefly because many authorities ignore the needs of people who have to resort to them for want of a better choice … . ’
30 ‘ Above all , we want decisions to be taken by those who have to live with them . ’
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