Example sentences of "who [verb] [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Who agreed the terms of the sale ?
2 They oversaw the reeves of the forest parishes , who branded the commoners ' cattle , the number depending on the size of the commoners ' holdings .
3 Contacts are the people who borrow the books and a ‘ want ’ can be logged against a contact .
4 Braine ) , who represents the Police Superintendents Association , can not be present at the debate and wishes to be associated with what I have to say .
5 Michael Shersby , the MP who represents the police federation 's interests in the Commons , told our reporter Simon Mares that he found the sentence hard to understand .
6 This novel seems , but only seems , but does seem insistently , to come from a man who knew nothing but was very opinionated , who checked no facts and guzzled rumour scraps , whose mind was uncouth , raggity , raucous , florid .
7 Similarly , if F t > E ( S T ) a trader who sold a futures contract now and held it to delivery would expect to make a profit of F t - E ( S T ) .
8 the manufacturer or distributor in question is not also the person who sold the goods to the consumer .
9 Who is the seller who sold the goods to Z ?
10 Part of the problem is that Americans are so used to seeing slick TV presenters on the small screen that they take exception to watching badly-dressed businessmen who lack the skills of professional performers .
11 The aim of the fund will be to award discretionary grants to young people who lack the resources to develop their interest in the outdoors .
12 There are without doubt residents in higher value properties who lack the funds to meet the more realistic charges that should apply to the F to H bands , but this should not mean that those with adequate funds should escape paying their fair share of the local tax burden .
13 The workforce therefore becomes increasingly polarised and fragmented , between the skilled and unskilled , core and periphery , and between the knowledge workers and those who lack the qualifications to join their ranks .
14 The men who attacked the police on May 1st were members of an organisation set up earlier this year by something called the National Salvation Front .
15 ‘ You think it was not the Maillotins who attacked the messengers ? ’
16 Many hospitals including those at Oxford , where some of the research took place , do not normally use it with patients who display no symptoms .
17 ‘ As my mother no longer had means to live , she died ; and I took myself off to the south in search of more sunshine and a master who asked no questions . ’
18 That is the pledge of club chairman Charlie Clapham , who insists the Sandgrounders are only looking to add strength to the side that lifted the HFS League championship trophy last term .
19 I run one of the self-help groups that one of the ladies mentioned and we looked at an outsize catalogue recently and it went up to size twenty six and in some cases up to a size thirty and the ladies who modelled the clothes were no bigger than a twelve , possibly a fourteen , but a very shapely fourteen !
20 He will argue that there is only Jordan to cross , and he may well be supported by those who fear the consequences for Labour of a new bloodletting .
21 His parents were storekeepers , and nothing in his education pointed to a career in the arts , except perhaps that when , as a young man , he began buying locally manufactured handicrafts , for subsequent resale , he was introduced to the creative urge latent in the people who produced the goods .
22 Westergaard and Resler ( who produced the figures for the period up to 1960 in Table 5 ) suggest that the most significant redistribution was within the wealthiest groups , rather than between them and the less well-off .
23 Before the end of the day , he had had a short sharp interview with Chief Inspector Chips Salter , who produced the names of the two families he suspected of killing the Pitts , with his reasons for this suspicion , while at the same time letting John Coffin know he thought he was wasting his time looking elsewhere .
24 No matter how efficient the Institution , how quick its response times or how well it is known nothing would be possible without those who raise the funds to keep the RNLI running , and in reporting the reaching of the end of another financial year in an excellent position to plan for our future the Chairman extended his thanks once again to the fund raisers .
25 Great-Great-Grandfather Tallentire had a daughter called Hannah who became a Bayles when she married and who was my father 's grandmother .
26 Historians have long argued about the ‘ rise ’ of this group , but basically it was the collective experience of nearly fifty individual families who became the pacesetters of Elizabethan Sussex .
27 Their position as outsiders was not transformed until the outbreak of the Second World War when it was Chamberlain 's ardent supporters , the ‘ appeasers ’ who became the outsiders and the ‘ guilty men ’ .
28 If I had to nominate those politicians whose views I most trusted , who have most clearly articulated my own fluid , contingent thoughts on the crisis as it developed , I would opt for two pensionable septuagenarians , both of whom I despised in their political heyday : Denis Healey , who sold the Labour government to the IMF , and Ted Heath , who became the Tories ' lamest duck of all .
29 After Newcastle died in 1768 it was the latter who became the arbiters of the county 's taste and public behaviour .
30 The ability to read and write was confined to churchmen ( this was common throughout the whole of northern Europe ) , not even William or his Norman Barons were able to read , so William appointed Lanfranc as Archbishop of Canterbury and he set up a diocesan pattern which endured and encouraged the growth of ecclesiastical courts of law and a succession of ‘ clerks ’ who became the forerunners of the civil servants .
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