Example sentences of "one [vb -s] the [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 No one doubts the toxic properties of lead above such levels , and that is not an issue in this debate .
2 No one doubts the huge work-loads that these departments face .
3 Rich though it is , there are not many binocular objects in Canis Major unless one counts the lovely star-fields near the Milky Way .
4 One needs the basic skills of research , including the ability to use the full resources of a research collection .
5 One needs the published histories of the towns and behind them the town records themselves .
6 this becomes clear when one studies the essential aspects of chimpanzee behaviour and communication , both in the wild as well as after familiarity with human ways .
7 One says the main problems are rival groups of casuals coming out of the discos and restaurants at about 4.30 , and the crowds that gather round the kebab shops .
8 If [ it ] … does not have the power to raise you up … to that mood where one sees the earthly veils pull away from oneself — then I too want to have nothing more to do with this philosophy . "
9 One concerns the cellular mechanisms underlying processes like learning and memory , since we might reasonably expect that the basic properties of nerve cells are the same in all species .
10 But it this ‘ assumption of … manhood ’ ( Fanon , Black Skin , 41 ) has constituted an agency of resistance — no small achievement when one recalls the crippling effects of domination and exploitation at the subjective level , effects which Fanon himself charts — it is one which perpetuates , in terms of sexual and gender relations , the very oppression being resisted at other levels .
11 An account of these travels will appear tame indeed unless one realises the extreme limitations imposed by shift work , penury and wartime restrictions .
12 He says that at the end of the Laws of Moses one finds the following words : " Moses , having heard the words of God , transmitted them to the Jews . "
13 Thus there is an inverse relationship between price and yield , as one rises the other falls , or as one falls the other rises .
14 As one rises the other declines and the discourse is maintained through variations upon the two themes and alternation of supremacy .
15 Thus there is an inverse relationship between price and yield , as one rises the other falls , or as one falls the other rises .
16 As one reads the various strictures of the Old Testament prophets against those who exploit their economic power , I can not help feeling that their major relevance within the U K today is to the trade union movement by the power exercised by elements within it .
17 It is easy to exaggerate the contribution that the reading of books and other materials make to development if one ignores the rich experiences provided by home , school , and peer group , but reading enables ( as can be seen from the discussion in earlier chapters ) a complementing of direct experience , a further widening of children 's worlds .
18 When one puts the five judgments together , the effect is chaos .
19 But when one considers the different things claimed as the key , comparisons crumble " ( Taylor 1978 : 9 ) .
20 After all , when one recognizes the different types of interrelationships which can exist , the linkages may be between SBUs in quite different industries .
21 One watches the 100 metres , that legendary dash with its magical ten-second touchstone , and one knows that these men , these Christies and Lewises and Burrells , are running toward the destiny of becoming the fastest human being in the world .
22 No one disputes the satisfactory results of this earlier move .
23 But no one knows the exact details : when the accident happened , the War Office was secretive and my father remembers nothing except waking up in hospital and the five major brain operations that followed to remove bits of shrapnel from his triple-fractured skull .
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