Example sentences of "of [noun pl] who [vb mod] [verb] " in BNC.
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1 | Curtain specialists and manufacturing upholsterers , all produced to an exceptional standard in our own workshops , and fitted by our own team of experts who will travel anywhere in the UK or abroad . |
2 | Curtain specialists and manufacturing upholsterers , all produced to an exceptional standard in our own workshops , and fitted by our own team of experts who will travel anywhere in the UK or abroad . |
3 | But Gandhi had plenty of enemies who would like to boast of his murder : a group like the United Liberation Front of Assam , separatist terrorists in the north-west of the country , could equally well be the culprit . |
4 | Operating in sections it 's corporals and below who if they are to encoutner problems it 's those sort of ranks who 'll have to fix it . |
5 | This week , Mark Richmond , chairman of the SERC , compared the small number of researchers who can use the NSF with the many more who can use other facilities at the same time . |
6 | There must be plenty of clubs who 'd like to take him on loan ‘ til the end of the season … probably even in the Premiership ( Swindon ; - ) ) . |
7 | And we are merely the precursors of generations who will harness the great life-force of electricity ! ’ |
8 | His papers only instructed him to travel on to Edinburgh where he was to help train the next group of recruits who would take their places on the Western Front . |
9 | There were a small minority of property-holders who could retire on their revenues , at a time of their choosing . |
10 | Her singing sounds alright but there are plenty of kids who could do that after a whirl in Stock , Aitken and Waterman 's mixmaster . |
11 | As stand-alone workstations for routine word processing they remain perfectly capable of meeting most normal requirements , but we have identified a number of work-groups who would operate more efficiently with higher standard machines . |
12 | After the war the number of readers who would laugh at pictures of seasick passengers , or bosuns getting the better of the second mate , diminished rapidly . |
13 | This reduces the size of the published paper , but it ensures that copies of evidential data are available to the relatively small number of readers who will require access to them . |
14 | Some districts have traditional NHS inpatient units and outpatient clinics , but these fell out of favour when studies of outcome revealed that they were not particularly effective and were not reaching a sufficiently wide range of drinkers who might benefit from the service . |
15 | Two advance parties , including Lt Col Neame , have already flown to Nepal to organise the 500 sherpas and scores of yaks who will carry nine tons of supplies to the south face base camp . |
16 | Examples were sown of the style of vestments worn when High Mass was celebrated — when the celebrant would have the assistance of Deacons who would wear the Dalmatic . |
17 | In the middle of the eighteenth century , customs and excise officers had a particularly high profile in the politics of seaport burghs , where many of them were themselves trades voters with a voice in the election of deacons who would sit in the burgh councils . |
18 | Thus the hunt was on for heads of functions who could deliver results , and executive search was seen to be the only truly effective way to actually define and attract this key talent . |
19 | I would think it 's a diminishing number because I think that a large number of judges who would have voted for Mr Clement Attlee would look askance at voting for some of his successors , with all respect to them . |
20 | There are plenty of companies who will fit replacement windows — for a price . |
21 | But for priority shareholders — customers of companies who will qualify for the 10p discount on each of the subsequent 70p part-payments should only sell when the price has risen as high as 150p to 160p . |
22 | There are lots of companies who will take charge of this whole operation , including the printing and fixing of the labels . |
23 | We intend to offer an international Strategic Programme in 1993 for a consortium of companies who could nominate up to five candidates each . |
24 | He remembered the ancient legends of the Guardians , the Brotherhood of Sorcerers who would serve and master if they were paid enough , and who would guard anything in the world if someone would employ them sufficiently profitably ; he remembered as well that the Conablaiche and the Lad of the Skins were abroad in the world again . |
25 | He studied in every spare moment he could find , not because he wanted to but because , in the absence of parents who would pay , he needed to win a scholarship even to get to school . |
26 | Yet there are unlikely to be many governors or bodies of parents who would disapprove of the more or less traditional approach of putting class teachers first , and there would be few who would persist in wanting the headteacher 's draft management plan — his or her daily manner of organizing and managing the school — to be changed as the result of open and equal argument between staff of all categories . |
27 | One way in which this operates is through the coordinating role of banks who can organize a protective safety net during periods of acute financial distress . |
28 | Whatever his motives , his experiment was made possible by the power he had to distribute land to the motley collection of individuals who would join him . |
29 | He and his staff relied on ‘ personal contacts in the most fruitful quarters ’ and ‘ visited , or wrote personally to , a host of individuals who could instruct and influence the young ; university tutors , deans of medical schools , schoolmasters , and so on ’ . |
30 | It is only through the influence of individuals who can set an example , and whom the masses recognize as their leaders , that they can be induced to perform the work and undergo the renunciations on which the existence of civilization depends . |