Example sentences of "one 's [noun sg] and [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Well , you 're basically talking about power relationships and that goes into almost every aspect of one 's life and one 's relationship , and I suppose you 're asking men to look at themselves differently too .
2 One has many ideas all one 's life and there are many points where they can come together cleanly enough to design an experiment .
3 Section er , I was very surprised indeed that er Hilary asking for a review of the service because in fact all one 's experience and I am sure as well tells us that this is a success story , it is something that petition after petition that we 've asking to keep it that way , shows that it is one of the services that the County provides which is very much appreciated by the recipients and we ca n't say that in all County Councils ' services but you can say it about er the section seventeen and I think you ought to acknowledge that Chairman .
4 Well one 's stereo and one 's mono really .
5 In fact , Marie Hoader tried to account for the negative consequences of unemployment in terms of five things that employment provides in our society , five sorts of experience that more and more , as we are industrialized and as more and more people are involved in working in employment , erm have come to be important and provided via employment , and we talked of two of those earlier — one 's activity and one was time structure — and you 've just raised the issue of feeling that you 're contributing to society in some way , that you 're part of a collective purpose , that you 're not just drawing things out , you 're also doing something useful with your time .
6 The interest of subjecting one 's society and one 's life to such principles of justice is assumed to be everyone 's highest interest .
7 A place is structured ‘ on the basis of one 's lifeworld and its meanings ’ ( p. 131 ) but a region
8 Young workers needed to develop the ‘ ability to grapple with unfamiliar conditions , and the habit of applying one 's mind and one 's knowledge to what one has to do ’ .
9 Indeed it may well be that it would be impossible to stand in no relation to the past , or to the framework in which one 's mind and one 's awareness as a religious person were formed .
10 Part of his objection may also have been that one 's trade and one 's home had in most cases parted company by that date , a development that William Morris was later to deplore .
11 Job satisfaction or dissatisfaction is a function of the perceived relationship between what one wants from one 's job and what one sees it as offering or entailing .
12 Yet the January , February , March the temperature is high which is temperature I ca n't tell by looking at that , which one 's temperature and which one 's rainfall .
13 The importance of living up to what was required by one 's status and what one had been used to came out over and over again in the discussions of the time , and ‘ prudence ’ became a moral imperative in the process of becoming axiomatic in the 1830s and 1840s .
14 Personal doubts , about one 's identity and one 's worth , will be settled by the provision of an ideological camera conferring an unambiguous and privileged identity upon all its users ( see , for example , Feuer , 1975 ; Hoffer , 1952 ) .
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