Example sentences of "[is] [conj] [noun] who " in BNC.

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1 It 's that Dee who 's having the party .
2 The other thing to remember is that women who have sex with women may be at risk of HIV infection if they share needles or syringes to inject drugs , or use semen that has not been tested for HIV if they want to get pregnant through self-insemination .
3 A negative side of the pro-baby culture is that women who do not breed are ‘ mules ’ .
4 The result is that riders who want to avoid heatstroke have to wear as little as possible under their jackets and most of us men have n't got used to innocently looking round to see someone undoing her jacket to reveal nothing but a clingy bra underneath !
5 The relatively high completion rates for the ‘ Other NSEs ’ reflects the fact that this includes students with ‘ professional , nursing , technical or secretarial qualifications ’ The pattern which emerges is that students who have been selected on the basis of success in some form of study which prepares them for the demands which will be placed on them in higher education respond as least as well if not better than the traditionally qualified A-level entrants , while those with less evidence of success of this kind find the transition to higher education difficult and are more likely to drop-out .
6 Well my feeling is that students who graduate from here ultimately get jobs .
7 The sad truth is that doctors who spend careers in research may forgo huge incomes from private practice .
8 The main one is that investors who wish to make regular subscriptions for a period of years will need only to complete one initial application form .
9 The truth is that Ministers who mouth those grandiloquent guarantees know little of what is happening on the ground .
10 ‘ All I do know is that others who approached me were warned off .
11 He says that every prisoner leaving jail should at least have enough clothing to make a fresh start , the danger is that prisoners who do n't have enough funds can return to crime .
12 The fact is that children who are persistently defiant are likely to receive ‘ payoffs ’ for being disobedient .
13 The second is that children who are used to watching Going Live are not likely to be enthralled by the Black and White Minister Show .
14 And what we do from research is that children who smoke are more likely to smoke the brands that are heavily advertised
15 ‘ But even worse is that children who are victims of crime are made to feel guilty and to blame . ’
16 The outcome is that men who have few resources other than physical ones are more likely to commit legally defined rape , whilst those men who possess a whole range of resources from economic patronage to cultural charm are likely to be viewed by the law as ‘ real men ’ practising their primeval arts-and that is something the majesty of the law should leave alone !
17 Medical advice is that men who drink more than 21 units a week and women who drink more than 14 units could damage their health .
18 The message is that drivers who do n't break their journey , are in serious danger of not completing it at all .
19 ‘ With an auction , you 've got to be certain that at least two buyers are there who can commit themselves , and the difficulty is that buyers who can proceed are few and far between , ’ said David Phillip , a director of Yorkshire estate agents Dacre Son and Hartley .
20 The dominance of the behavioural approach has led to the equating of need with willingness to pay or expressed demand … [ but ] a by-product of behaviour-based transport planning is that individuals who do not show ‘ demand ’ for movements are assumed not to ‘ need ’ to move
21 The second is that staff who transfer from hospitals to the community change their attitudes toward their charges , taking on new enabling and nurturing rather than rule-enforcing and limit-setting care roles .
22 The Unionist MP Ken Maginnis , a former UDR member , said : ‘ What I hope is not happening is that people who — as I would have had in my time — had montages for lawful and necessary purposes will be made scapegoats . ’
23 ‘ My fear is that people who are not suspected of committing an immigration offence may find themselves on this machine , which could have startling ramifications for them , ’ he said this week .
24 The one stumbling block is that people who come to the bank for loans have to pay half the consultant 's fee — which could come to several hundred pounds .
25 The second major problem is that people who do not consider that these needs have been met continually manipulate others to meet them .
26 Well the suggestion is that people who are n't er maintaining a traditional family unit are actually being , like being penalised by public policy , is is is that a general opinion ?
27 The experience of rehabilitation centres is that people who come to them having been conscientiously cheerful since the day of their loss , who have never wept or allowed themselves to enter fully into the pain of their loss , find it much more difficult to acquire new skills .
28 Erm the problem is that people who were in this account two years ago were earning thirteen and a half percent , well say eighteen months ago .
29 The general impression from the media action people who answered the telephones is that people who called appreciated the information point and had no objections to being asked to call another number to deal with enquiries about bills .
30 One of its most important aspects is that people who go on to DWA will retain their underlying entitlement to any benefit which they may have had before they went on to DWA and that they will not have to requalify , if they fail in their efforts to work .
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