Example sentences of "[verb] [prep] [noun sg] be those " in BNC.
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1 | The countries which qualify for assistance are those with a per capita GNP of less than US $ 791 ( valued at 1983 dollars ) . |
2 | The rules of the STV game decree that the only ballot papers needing to be considered for transfer are those that came along last , i.e. in the present case those that lifted Craig 's votes from below to above the quota . |
3 | Well , what he has in mind are those very books which are the core of our course , that is Freud 's writings on social sciences , religion , society , morality , social philosophy , that , that kind of thing . |
4 | You can hear them from a long way now what you do is you sit them down and let them take up their own particular position , you can , if they 've got their medication their Ventilin or whatever , you can put it beside them , they will know if they need to take it or not , get them with the fresh air and let them take up their own position which is usually leaning forward so that it expands their lungs , talk to them about something different because sometimes well they 've got to think of what to answer you , it 's relaxing those tubes , now if they 're taking their medication and it does n't work within about five minutes get them to hospital , because the only people that really die with asthma are those that have taken medication and keep saying I 'll give it a few more minutes , give it a few more minutes and if they 're getting worse and worse they 're leaving it too long . |
5 | In general , the materials which can be dated by radiocarbon are those which once formed part of the biosphere , and hence are organic . |
6 | The employee 's problems arose because by section 82 the ages used for disentitlement were those at which the old age pension was payable — 60 for women and 65 for men . |
7 | Yes and one can imagine that it might be like that , but of course the women that we meet at university are those who have become scientists very often . |
8 | The most energetic waves likely to be observed on Earth are those due to stellar collapse in our Galaxy . |
9 | And not surprisingly , the motorists hardest hit by recession are those living in London and the south-east . |
10 | The only obligations to transfer economic benefits which should not be taken into account are those which would not be considered in accordance with the going concern concept , that is , those which would only arise on the insolvency of the issuer and , where the issuer is expected to be able to comply with covenants on loan and similar agreements , those which would follow a breach of those covenants . |
11 | Thus the aspects of the Fulton recommendations that could be put into practice were those compatible with ministerial responsibility . |
12 | ‘ What I find unbearable and can not brook as leader is those who , after we make that decision , will deviate and not comply with our decision , ’ he said . |
13 | However , a Defence Department ( Pentagon ) spokesman quoted in The Washington Post of July 19 said that the set of remains alleged to be Col. Robertson had in fact been those of a " non-human mammal " . |
14 | The only people who had trouble in adjusting to work were those who for some reason deviated from this model — either by going up the social scale or by going down it ( social mobility is more fully discussed by Geoff Payne in this volume ) . |
15 | When think of research , the calibre of names that come to mind are those of Charles Darwin and Isaac Newton , Gregor Mendel and Albert Einstein , Andrew Schally and Roger Guillemin , Peter Medawar and Francis Crick , John Vane and Aaron Klug . |
16 | There have of course been those who have deplored such a connection . |
17 | Among names that immediately spring to mind are those of Sydney Schanberg , the former New York Times correspondent who was in Phnom Penh at the time of the fall , and whose subsequent search for his Cambodian assistant , Dith Pran , was documented in Roland Joffé 's film The Killing Fields , who arrived in Indo- China at the age of 21 and was there from 1970 to mid-1975 , first with Agence France Presse , then as a stringer for The Sunday Times — when all the other journalists were getting out , Swain was either brave or foolhardy enough to fly back into Phnom Penh in time for its fall ; William Shawcross who , along with many others , covered the Vietnam war for The Sunday Times and who subsequently became obsessed with the fate of Cambodia , an obsession that resulted first in Sideshow , which exposed the role of Nixon and Kissinger , and then in The Quality of Mercy , a study of the work of the Red Cross in Cambodia ; John Pilger , the British-based Australian journalist whose work on Cambodia may have had little concrete effect but has at least helped to ensure that the tragic country will never disappear into oblivion ; Philip Caputo , who went initially to Vietnam in March 1965 as a 23-year-old Marine officer with the first US combat group sent to Indo-China and returned in 1975 as a correspondent to report on what was left of the war . |
18 | Other key works on implementation are those by Pressman and Wildavsky ( see n. 6 ) and Bardach ( see n. 4 ) and an article by Van Meter and Van Horn . |