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

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1 Bicester 's opponents are Bradford Salem , the side who beat them in the final last year .
2 A few lay on the ground in exhausted or inebriated sleep , oblivious to children and dogs who clambered over them , or to the kicks from porters who found them in the way .
3 This weirdo is perceived as poking around dusty old bookshops instead of the gleaming God-have-you-any- conception -what-this-refit-has-just-cost-us sort of outlet and , worse , buys secondhand books , books that have already been sold and therefore attract no income or royalties whatever ; and who might even be willing to pay up to 10 times the original cover price if the damn thing is a first edition , whereas everyone knows that first editions are merely what are given away free , for heaven 's sake , to hacks who seldom review them and — even more galling — to the bloody authors who wrote them in the first place .
4 In fact the victims were mainly the families of senior military officers and the Ba'ath party officials , and the walkie-talkies were being used by the drivers who took them to the shelter .
5 The general manager of the company Ian McCall said ; ‘ We have had a tremendous response already and we expect parents who wore them in the fifties and sixties to buy them for their children . ’
6 A month later my parents were met on the open plain outside Addis Ababa by Lord Herbert Hervey and a deputation of Abyssinian notables who escorted them to the Legation , at some distance to the east of the town , in an extensive compound at the foot of the Entoto hills .
7 But it is undoubtedly dangerous and often cruel , stirring not so much the boxers but the crowds who watch them to a pitch of savagery quite incompatible with the notion that boxing is ‘ the noble art of self-defence ’ .
8 They were last seen by a taxi driver who dropped them at the railway station more than 24 hours earlier .
9 Hodai told Rostov that the major-domo who met them in the antechamber of the palace was a N'pani , the only foreigner with any authority at the court .
10 The two men have different versions of the meeting which followed , and there were no witnesses except for a waiter who interrupted them in the middle of the shouting match and asked if they wanted any sandwiches .
11 These pairs are alphabetically listed and linked to the name of any author who used them in the title of the article that he wrote .
12 Texts were inevitably part of their culture , as were the individuals who wrote them under the shaping constraints of state , family , religion .
13 There is no doubt at all that heads have the power , in managerial terms , to make such decisions ; but it would be a foolish head who put them to the governors without first winning staff support .
14 Most successful companies are bought out by large customers who see them as a way of getting into new technologies .
15 Marje says : ‘ I think I 'm not so different from my readers , who write and say they have brutal husbands , and how they are beaten night after night by drunken swine who abuse them in every way and yet they still go on living with them .
16 Under the general safety requirement , retailers are criminally liable if they knowingly expose an unsafe product for sale , whereas in civil law , under the product liability regime , retailers are liable to third party victims only if they present themselves as the producer or can not identify the person who supplied them with the product .
17 They backed the horse between the traces and untied her hobble without a glance at the Horsey townsfolk who watched them from a very great distance .
18 Had the two friends discussed her in the way men probably did when they looked at a young woman who passed them in the street ?
19 subsequently after about ten flights , and porting over the books , and speaking to people who serviced them during the war years , they discovered that all it needed was a well-placed whack with a hammer on the trailing edge of the aileron .
20 They say that monkeys are often badly treated by people who bring them into the country without really understanding how to care for them .
21 The kinds of people who were aware of public opinion polls in the closing stages of the campaign were very different from the kinds of people who followed them in the mid-term .
22 They speak the same language and can relate to the people who consult them in a more personal , less clinical and intimidating fashion .
23 The wolves were hunted to extinction in the 1920s , at the request of ranchers who regarded them as a threat to cattle .
24 But scholars who use them with a sober sense of their limitations can add a new dimension to literary studies , and in an age of divided cultures we should surely be ready to welcome a marriage of literacy and numeracy .
25 The choice of Natal is strange as captain Craig Jamieson , the man who led them to the Cup in 1990 , is still very much involved in rugby .
26 Two of the players who beat them in the Dunhill Cup final carry England 's hopes .
27 On 2 November the ban on the 5 October route was challenged by fifteen DCAC members who walked it , accompanied by a large crowd who followed them on the footpaths .
28 As they travelled west , along the same route that the young cadet had come , they met travellers who told them of the horrors of the revolution .
29 She says they worked closely with the Hindu community in Cheltenham who introduced them to a teacher from Birmingham who taught them .
30 The Runefangs were presented to the ruling Emperor who divided them between the Elector counts .
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