Example sentences of "who live [prep] a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 For those of us who live with a friendly cat it is hard to understand people who suffer from a terror of encountering felines at close quarters .
2 As for those countries who live under a non-religious dictatorship and are officially atheist , they appear to have learned a few things from the Inquisition .
3 The couple are totally accepted by Linda 's middle-aged parents who live in a terraced house in Darlington .
4 Altogether there is a population of only about 190 , who live in a scattered community , largely agricultural .
5 He wanted to emphasize the new play 's connection with The Family Reunion : once again he was to deal with characters who live in a worn-out society , and have lost their way .
6 Another friend , whose husband is a farmer , shares the care of her parents , who live in a neighbouring village , with a married sister , who also lives nearby .
7 Mm I mean er why do n't they do it on like the square , how big your house is because that way you could I know it 's not far when people who live in a great big old house do n't have to pay as much cos if this I mean Uncle Trevor and Aunty they 've got a massive great house have n't they ?
8 Frequently too , people who live in a particular geographic location combine together to form a pressure group if their neighbourhood has been earmarked by government for the siting of , for example , a new motorway or nuclear power station or the dumping of nuclear waste which is considered to constitute a substantial threat to their safety and health .
9 A farmer and his family who live in a wooden shack on their organic farm say they will lose their home and their livelihood if they are n't allowed to build a proper house .
10 Managers , who live in a constant state of anxiety , tend not to see games as others do and Joe Jordan duly declared himself happy enough with the result which , apart from extending Hearts ' unbeaten run against their city rivals to 17 , keeps them in contention for a place in Europe .
11 Economic considerations are mediated through the minds of human beings who live in a social world , which means that the impact of economics is crucially conditioned by ideology — a notion which has been explored and expanded by the Marxist theorists to whom we now turn .
12 So perhaps you feel that while all this talk about kinship and affinity may make good sense in discussions of the social life of Australian Aborigines or of Trobriand Islanders in Melanesia , it really has very little relevance for ourselves who live in a social context in which , as a general rule , affinity is of little significance and the majority of social relationships outside the domestic family are coded in quite a different way .
13 Those who live in a high-spending authority , inhabit an expensive house and are part of a small household will find themselves at a triple advantage .
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