Example sentences of "each [noun pl] ' [noun] " in BNC.

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1 How she had suffered for him , for her poor pitiable ridiculous father , how she had hated her cruel peers for their relentless mocking , how she had dreaded each Christmas pantomime , each school-leavers ' farewell , each assembly that she knew her father was due to conduct , each occasion on which she heard him open his mouth in public .
2 Thus each days ' dosage remains homœopathic to the case as the slight increase in the health of the vital force is matched with the slight increase in potency caused by the five or six shakes of the bottle .
3 The two central , baggy-suited dancers , Lynne Bristow and William Trevitt , either mirror each others ' movements ( the old man perhaps communing with his diary ) or else dance as a couple ( the man reliving past relationships ) .
4 And of course , we spend half our lives in each others ' houses , eating .
5 The way forward should be for both sides to try and understand one another , to recognise each others ' rights , feelings and beliefs .
6 Conversation can be generated by pupils using drill and practice software as well as database programs , in that the pupils often use each other as a resource for learning , drawing upon each others ' preknowledge and experience .
7 Ethologists have offered a good deal of cross-cultural evidence , usually in the form of pictures of infants seizing each others ' toys and pushing each other about in sandpits , to support the view that the tendency to direct unprovoked action upon another person is at least universal , even though there is nothing in the evidence to suggest a unique origin for the tendency .
8 What do you notice about each others ' prints ?
9 or more pairs stood , grasping each others ' wrists .
10 Encouraged by their interpretations of each others ' dreams they set off against Humbaba to cut down his cedar forests .
11 The Reagan administration is trying to establish an alternative to the convention , in the form of a ‘ mini-treaty ’ including only the mining nations who recognise and protect each others ' claims .
12 Seven nations ( Australia , France , New Zealand , Norway , the UK , Argentina , Chile ) claim sectors of the continent ; the claims of the last three overlap substantially , and only the first five recognize each others ' claims reciprocally .
13 Now , with both Liverpool and Everton among the also-rans the two men find themselves in the ironic position of standing in each others ' way with the Premier League championship up for grabs .
14 His positioning helped Iain Dowie — the pair have tended to get in each others ' way on past occasions — and Dowie revelled in the extra space .
15 Hitherto , the empirical watchers and the grand theorists have largely ignored each others ' work .
16 First it was necessary for participants to recognise how little they understood of each others ' work , and then to begin to formulate ways of working as a team .
17 Every few lessons the class has a criticism , and the children will criticise each others ' work .
18 Can signers understand each others ' sign languages ?
19 Can signers from different countries communicate with each other even if they do n't know each others ' sign languages ?
20 Battison and Jordan report several types of study to determine if signers from different countries understand each others ' signing .
21 Arabian oryx also lick the dew that may accumulate on rocks and on each others ' hair , as the humid air from the Arabian Sea rolls in at night .
22 John Sutphen suggests that with the three sonar channels available to dolphins , cetaceans can see-read-hear into each others ' hearts and brains .
23 Managers gauge each others ' prestige by comparing the sizes of their BMWs .
24 Top : These Apple Snails are not mating — they are , in fact merely grazing each others ' shell .
25 Irena arrived looking stunning , and the entire audience spent the interval walking about studying each others ' clothes .
26 Moss says he has negotiated with the unnamed firms to ensure they wo n't be duplicating each others ' efforts .
27 Moss says he has negotiated with the unnamed firms to ensure they wo n't be duplicating each others ' efforts .
28 These changes in teaching approach have developed through teachers coming together to question and challenge their own and each others ' assumptions about mathematics learning and teaching .
29 Such functionality requires a set of application programming interfaces allowing Tuxedo and CICS/6000-based TP systems to acknowledge each others ' transaction requests .
30 Their models are their own or each others ' motets and chansons and the chansons of such Parisian colleagues as Claudin de Sermisy , and they make fuller use of the whole polyphonic complex of the model than their predecessors had done : how flexibly may be seen by comparing the opening of the Kyrie of Clemens 's already mentioned Mass ‘ Misericorde ’ : with that of his chanson ‘ Misericorde au martir amoureulx ’ : Bars 3–5 of the Kyrie are not the extraneous interpolation they seem to be ; they come from bars 18–20 of the chanson :
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