Example sentences of "who [vb -s] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Each of the sisters who offers an appropriate form of service to the group enables the balance to be held at rest .
2 Competitive tendering is a system whereby contracts are awarded to the supplier who offers the best deal .
3 The first correct entry drawn out of the hat came from Caroline Fitzgerald from Stamford Brook , London , who wins a Golden Bone Award .
4 Dave Whelan , 53 , who played for Blackburn Rovers and broke a leg in the 1960 FA Cup final , has offered £100,000 to any youngster born within 10 miles of Wigan parish church who wins the junior Wimbledon title in the next 10 years .
5 Dave Whelan , 53 , who played for Blackburn Rovers and broke a leg in the 1960 FA Cup final , has offred £100,000 to any youngster born within 10 miles of Wigan parish church who wins the junior Wimbledon title in the next 10 years .
6 The bill is just over £300 and is the last poll tax bill which will have to be paid , no matter who wins the General Election .
7 But I want to be a history maker , to be the first coach who wins the European Cup for an English club and the coach who makes England an international force .
8 A SUBSTANTIAL silent minority still holds the key to who wins the marginal seat of Darlington , according to a new poll .
9 Well it 's one who spoils the bloody party is n't he ?
10 She has from day one showed her disdain for me as one opposed to hypocrisy and her type of esoteric or pseudo intellectuality — being satisfied as I am with intelligence , integrity and interest ( ! ) — and has manifestly made it clear she overtly dislikes me because I wo n't be moulded or do what she wants or tells me — she suffers the matriarch/ bossy syndrome ( childhood nickname I am told was ) and does not like the fact I am utterly my own forthright person who spoils the incestuous sibling smythe-watson quartet which she ‘ ran ’ so self-interestedly for so long …
11 Their leaders — who keep in touch with their friends in the Senate — are Tim Penny , of Minnesota , and Dave McCurdy , of Oklahoma , both members of the centrist Democratic Leadership Council ( which is chaired by Mr Breaux ) together with Charles Stenholm , who represents a great chunk of west Texas .
12 Therefore , I can assure my hon. Friend , who represents a rural constituency , that we have very much in mind the needs of rural post offices and we shall look with interest at any requests that they make to us for extending their liability to sell other services .
13 Father Caden , who represents the Catholic diocese on Durham County Council 's education committee , said he , too , wanted a clear declaration that extra places were a basic need in the north end of Darlington .
14 THE MISSING link reappears at Goodwood this afternoon in the shape of Ile De Nisky ( 2.45 ) , the horse who represents the prime piece of evidence in the argument over the comparative merits of Nashwan and Old Vic , writes John Karter .
15 It found that a number of them were ‘ what could be described as pits ’ , according to the Nigerian ambassador , BA Clark , who headed the team and who represents the United Nations Transition Assistance Group ( Untag ) in Angola .
16 Wife Sandra adds : ‘ He 's a man of few words who hates the slightest bit of noise .
17 The first of his correspondents is Lady Amherst who records a stormy love affair with one of Barth 's surrogates , one Ambrose Mensch .
18 When the change has been scheduled , a copy of the Change Control Form will be sent to the Change Coordinator who records the following information in the Changes Log :
19 When assessing the needs of a disabled person ( including an elderly person with disabilities ) who receives a substantial amount of care regularly from someone not employed by the local authority , the authority is required to : ‘ have regard to the ability of that person to continue to provide help on a regular basis ’ .
20 First out of the hat was John Riley of Fribourg , Switzerland , who receives a signed copy of Melvyn 's meisterwork , A Time To Dance .
21 the extremely dependent elderly person with mental and physical frailty who receives a considerable degree of informal support .
22 The tellers look first at who receives the first preference on each ballot paper and put into each candidate 's box every ballot paper on which he is number one .
23 A man who receives an electric shock does not ask himself whether he believes in the form of energy known as electricity .
24 A choreographer who neglects the old rules and any item pertinent to the unfolding of the plot , theme or music is demanding a great deal from an audience .
25 And Tara ( 6 ) , owned by Leslie Patton of Bangor , will be Sandy , the faithful dog who befriends the little orphan girl .
26 I seem to remember an American thesis writer who crashed to the ground over this contorted problem , and I am sure that both Worsley and Sir John Summerson ( who contributes an elegant introduction to Mansbridge 's book ) would concur that mystery still surrounds the problem of Nash the draughtsman .
27 There is extra prestige for a child who produces a new word the others do not know .
28 Similes may be dangerous , but it can be suggested that the man who produces a well-made brick makes a better contribution to housing than does the man who builds a large mansion on insecure foundations .
29 But this time it went wrong and Ms Kennedy , who plays a republican activist in the drama , had to receive treatment for an eye injury .
30 He was backed by the grand dame of the series , Ann Charleston , who plays the matriarchal Madge .
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