Example sentences of "his [coord] [pron] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Do not provide too much detailed information ; do not disclose medical reports ; do not indicate the financial status of the client or his or her willingness and ability to litigate .
2 Having extended the narrow problem posed by Marx , of the separation of the worker and product , to that of the separation of the subject from culture , Simmel does , however , begin with the premise that the subject might develop in relation to forms which are not his or her individual or class product , a proposition which will be explored further in chapter 10 .
3 Some reformers ( Kaldor , 1955 ; Meade , 1978 ; Pechman , 1980 ; Economist , 17 September 1983 ) have argued that instead of taxing an individual 's income , it would be better to tax his or her expenditure .
4 A national survey of teachers ' attitudes to equal opportunities found that men were more likely to be opposed to promoting equal opportunities than women , but that differences in subject taught were more important than the sex of the teacher in determining his or her attitude .
5 The great majority were not embarrassed in approaching their doctor and were happy with his or her attitude .
6 Yet the reality is that it is only in companies where each shareholder has a sufficiently substantial stake in the company to make it worth his or her while performing the tasks of monitoring and supervising the behaviour of the directors that this constitutional framework can hope to provide an adequate control on the behaviour of directors .
7 So neither one has a right to a decision in his or her favour , and the judge must decide the case according to whichever rule he thinks best for the future , all things considered .
8 But out of 9000 books published in science , technology and medicine during 1982 ( plus the many thousands of titles in print ) , how does the student make his or her selection ?
9 Hence the individual voter 's starting-point in trying to influence policy through the electoral process is a situation of very limited choice in which it is general policy biases , or even more general considerations , often described as ‘ party images ’ , that must govern his or her selection of an MP .
10 The selection of a prospective parliamentary candidate shall not be regarded as completed until the name of the member selected has been placed before a meeting of the National Executive Committee , and his or her selection has been duly endorsed .
11 ( 9 ) When this party has selected the prospective parliamentary candidate , section ( 3 ) of this clause shall be applicable only when section ( 8 ) applies or , having received a written request from the General Committee of this party for permission to reconsider the selection of the prospective parliamentary candidate , the National Executive Committee has decided that in its opinion there are changed circumstances relating to the prospective parliamentary candidate since his or her selection , and has given authority to this party to convene a special meeting of the General Committee in accordance with regulations sanctioned by the National Executive Committee to consider a resolution that the prospective candidate selected previously shall not be the candidate at the next general election .
12 Lord Morton added that under criminal law , a driver who caused injury to a foetus could be convicted of causing death by reckless driving if the child were born alive but then died of his or her injuries .
13 Under these circumstances , a growing obsession , a hormonal surge or both together may intensify his or her craving for sexual re-determination .
14 It will also depend upon which type of promotion the editor is prepared to tolerate in his or her pages , for the choice of medium is as important here as many other parts of the media programme .
15 References to authorities and to documents , to which counsel intends to refer in his or her submissions to the court , should be annexed to the skeleton arguments .
16 When the manager extends his or her self-evaluation to the encouragement of others to reveal their own views as well as their estimate of their own capacities , the notion of self-certainty and self-esteem is crucial .
17 The child is not capable of controlling this flow and will show staining of his or her pants .
18 If soiling has occurred the child should be informed immediately , the parents indicate their displeasure at this , and the child should have his or her pants changed .
19 Their teaching qualifications are of obvious benefit to the church ; the ability of a musical director to teach is as important as his or her mastery of musical skills .
20 A novelist adapting his or her work for the screen must also adapt to the different status of the writer in the production process .
21 He was also general editor of an important series of pamphlets , ‘ Writers and Their Works ’ , each containing an essay on an author and an extended checklist of his or her work ( those for John Webster and AE Housman he wrote himself ) ; Scribner 's , the New York publishers , later collected these in eight volumes .
22 Obviously , it is in a ‘ plugger 's ’ interest to claim that it was his or her work which made a record into a hit , but if you employ a ‘ plugger ’ it is worth being sceptical when deciding what to believe .
23 Any British secondary school head , deputy head or head of department will be acutely conscious that his or her work will ultimately be judged and validated by examination grades .
24 During this period a student normally attends courses in research methods and is required at the end of the period to submit a thesis embodying the results of his or her work .
25 The Summer Exhibition is the chance of every artist — whether painter , sculptor or printmaker — to show his or her work alongside that of internationally acclaimed counterparts .
26 A normal person is proud of his or her work .
27 The artist will seek a project which suits his or her work yet offer some challenges and opportunities .
28 The sociologist as a ‘ citizen ’ has to ask about the uses to which his or her work is to be put ( see , for example , the discussion of Project Camelot in Chapter 13 ) .
29 Everybody has a boss , a person who has the responsibility to oversee his or her work ; the Chairperson of the Board has the company 's shareholders while the Prime Minister has to face the electorate for a renewal of the mandate at least every five years .
30 His or her work must inevitably lie in an area where public anger , resentment and guilt are rife .
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