Example sentences of "their [det] [noun] [coord] their " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Thus Johnson replicates these occupations ' concern with their own organisation and their rhetoric of the ignorance ( vulnerability ) of the client . |
2 | Obviously unions have their own traditions and their own ways of doing things in their own organizational structures . |
3 | They have their own rules and their own hierarchy . |
4 | On the other hand , British political leaders gave priority to what Churchill had called their own dream and their own task . |
5 | All over the burrow , both the newcomers and those who were at home were accustoming themselves to each other in their own way and their own time ; getting to know what the strangers smelt like , how they moved , how they breathed , how they scratched , the feel of their rhythms and pulses . |
6 | Rubbing shoulders with this aggressively 20th century lifestyle , are the traditions of the majority indigenous Indian population , who forced out of their villages by drought and unemployment to seek work in the city , have established their own communities and their own markets where they come to buy and sell potatoes and cornmeal and where the Fortune-teller sits playing his chanrango while waiting for his next customer . |
7 | And of course had their own camp and their own agent 's bungalow Lyness , down on the point . |
8 | It would seem that the rationale behind this agenda is that ordinary people who make their own decisions , built on their own experience , who create their own pressure groups , their own education and their own work are dangerous and must be marginalised . |
9 | Many black adolescents I talked to were conscious of the differences between their own Creole and their parents ' . |
10 | They even had some control over their own finances and their own armed forces . |
11 | It was only then that people were able to make the connections to their own lives and their other experiences of oppression , and how different oppressions overlap and intervene . |
12 | Lastly it is most important of all that teachers apply the process of clarification to their own values and their own vision of education , and it is to this issue that we will turn in the next chapter . |
13 | This implies , in the absence of foundationalist or externally imposed ‘ legislation ’ , that cultural practices — e.g. in the various scientific disciplines , in the arts — must develop their own rule-boundedness and their own conditions of validity . |
14 | They suggest that the weakening of party identification may mean that voters ' preference on issues will be determined less by established patterns of party identification and more by their own positions and their perceptions of party policy . |
15 | They see humans as actively creating their own meanings and their own society in interaction with each other . |
16 | She knows that they come to life under her touch , and that they may carry their own life and their creator be forgotten . |
17 | I 'm a strong advocate of black people interpreting their own life and their own vision . ’ |
18 | And it was , had been a long weary road for these two women as they travelled back to Bethlehem , with their own thoughts and their fears . |
19 | One should also accept , however , that interpretation and evaluation are not objective statements about literary works , but statements about the interaction between works and their readers , because critics can not avoid imposing their own views and their own preferences on the texts with which they deal . |
20 | Just a merest glimpse at the trade papers reveals the extent to which from the start the movies had to fight against their own impulses and their own logic . |
21 | Nowhere is this more obvious than in the music press where critics collect their own charts , their own thought and their own egos . |
22 | Many were the results of private enterprise by barons concerned with their own defence and their own private wars . |
23 | So many women today were independent high achievers , controlling their own money and their own lives . |
24 | The only thing that could warp the way that the band goes is the media , because they lie for the most part ; they come up with their own reasons and their own interpretations and people just believe what they read . ’ |
25 | The reason for thinking that chloroplasts have this origin is that they still retain their own DNA and their own protein-synthesizing machinery . |
26 | The research is concerned with children 's understanding of their own emotions and their growing ability to control and re-interpret their emotional reactions . |
27 | It was a busier time for us because we had to feed the the the six of them w we put them into a big shed and they just slept there but we we gave them their dinner , they managed to make their own breakfast and their tea whatever They had bread and stuff like that but we had to make their dinner for them . |
28 | erm So it 's rather smaller erm and in that sense differs , because of the extent to which the federal states have their , have their own powers and their own responsibilities . |
29 | They are well aware of the amount of variation possible in ‘ scientifically produced ’ data and look with a certain scepticism upon laboratory results , especially when they diverge markedly from their own intuition or their expectations based on past knowledge . |
30 | She knew from experience how , when anyone heard you were a vet , they immediately began discussing their own pets and their various problems . |