Example sentences of "who [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Its first owners were a noble Florentine family — the Pucci family — who through the generations , owned it , lost it and repossessed it on several occasions . |
2 | It calls us to identify with a Christ who through the horror of the crucifixion leads us , his people , to new life and hope . |
3 | However , as we have seen , central government , who through the SEC has boldly pressed on with the introduction of the GCSE , has even in doing so been subject to its own and its advisers ' demands that Standards should be preserved . |
4 | It is the work of the resulting army of dedicated and sincere reformers who through the centuries have fought to make mankind accept that the Second Choice is the right one , that has provided , and will go on providing for ever , the real power for the production of the good that will be assigned to the storehouse that is the Created God . |
5 | Who through the attention of Mr. Creed , and Mr. Lord his assistant secretary , many hundreds were permitted to do so . ’ |
6 | Expatriates , who between the wars numbered 80,000 in a city of half a million , began to depart . |
7 | Derby 's Government in the Commons was led by the Leader of the House and Chancellor of the Exchequer , Benjamin Disraeli , who as a member of the Select Committee which examined the 1855 Act and Hall 's Committee of 1856 was well aware of the need for a new Foreign Office . |
8 | Subsequent correspondence revealed that the Registrar of Walkato is none other than Mr Jeremy J Callaghan , who as a member of Salford Registrar 's Department was responsible for Convocation affairs in the early 1970s . |
9 | State peasants , who as a percentage of the rural population grew to about 54 per cent by the time of the Crimean War , fared little better . |
10 | Lord Teviot is listed in Who 's Who as a genealogist ( one who studies family pedigrees ) . |
11 | She also has an aunt who as a girl in Oxford knew several famous philosophers . |
12 | why were the Neanderthals , who as a species of human being had had a much longer pedigree , vulnerable to the Cro-Magnons ? |
13 | Sir Matt Busby , who as a Manchester City player often appeared against what he calls ‘ the magnificent Arsenal of the early Thirties ’ , describes the key role played by Alex James ( whom he knew and idolized as a boy in the Glasgow suburbs of their youth ) : ‘ James was the great creator from the middle . |
14 | He had heard so much about it from the Queen Mother — who as a child had been there every year — and from so many other people that he had felt it was a part of his education that was sorely lacking . |
15 | The Irish star , who as a child was battered by her mother , revealed that she went to a psychiatrist to sort out her problems . |
16 | We phoned a good , dear friend who as a midwife had gone to much trouble and arranged to deliver the baby . |
17 | Of the Hagley castle , even Horace Walpole [ q.v. ] — who as a fellow-pioneer in the same field was in general highly critical of Miller 's performances — was obliged to concede , in an oft-quoted aphorism , that it had ‘ the true rust of the Barons ’ wars ' . |
18 | This view seems to have rubbed off on foreign , non-Marxist interpreters of the passage of NEP , who as a whole are inclined to think that a cultural policy of laissez-faire was pursued throughout NEP . |
19 | He replaced Gen. Jorge Moreira Rojas [ see p. 37851 ] , who had stated that " professional ethics " did not allow him to take orders from the new Defence Minister , Klinsky , who as a rear-admiral was subordinate to him . |
20 | In the early hours of yesterday morning they were beaten in four sets by Patrick McEnroe and Jim Grabb , and then some 13 hours later they fell 6-3 , 7-6 , 7-6 to the Australians Darren Cahill and Mark Kratzman , who as a result qualified for the semi-finals . |
21 | In the early hours of yesterday morning they were beaten in four sets by Patrick McEnroe and Jim Grabb , and then some 13 hours later they fell 6-3 , 7-6 , 7-6 to the Australians Darren Cahill and Mark Kratzman , who as a result qualified for the semi-finals . |
22 | ‘ But I feel dismay , sorrow , for so many people in our country who do not share this personal good fortune and who as a result of further years of Tory government will experience further disadvantage . |
23 | And who as a result has acquired a rather topsy-turvy view of her own importance . |
24 | Among the earl 's possessions there was the lordship of Spofforth , the home of the Middletons of Stokeld , who as a result naturally looked to the Percies for lordship . |
25 | What then would happen to children falling below these levels , who as a result of this restriction might be denied appropriate teaching ? |
26 | The Writer is aware of one scheme where the planning brief was ignored by a developer , who as a result achieved an increase in density and was able to submit a substantially higher tender figure than other developers who had conformed to the planning brief . |
27 | Among the earl 's possessions there was the lordship of Spofforth , the home of the Middletons of Stokeld , who as a result naturally looked to the Percies for lordship . |
28 | Two successive league defeats in the middle of last month have been followed by pre-occupation with cup action for the Mariners , who as a result have slipped to sixth in the table . |
29 | Murdani , who as a serving officer had been the architect of the 1975 invasion , was reportedly opposed to the demilitarization of the province in 1989 . |
30 | They had four sons ( the eldest of whom died in 1895 ) and by the second , Charles , came the five grandsons who as a team continued the family firm until it was sold in 1965 to the Hawker Siddeley Group . |