Example sentences of "[prep] [det] who can [verb] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 While I recommend such systems for those who can afford them , they can give a false sense of security to the beginner , especially if something goes wrong .
2 For those who can afford it , a course of treatment with a professional psychotherapist may be the best answer , although it is important to select the person and the approach carefully .
3 TOP CLASS : Eton offers a good education — for those who can afford it
4 The only choice is between a brutal — and extremely dangerous — village castration , or , for those who can afford it , a course in hormone pills followed by an anaesthetized operation .
5 Besides the ordinary shops accessible to anyone — selling subsidized goods but often with bare shelves — are the ‘ commercial ’ shops only for those who can afford it .
6 I have no objection to private residential care for those who can afford it , but the Minister must admit that local authorities do an excellent job in terms of residential care and that there should be more local authority residential care places .
7 For those who can afford it … the top holiday destinations this Easter are … just about anywhere in the sun …
8 Capital transfer tax was abolished in the 1986 Budget and has been replaced by inheritance tax which , for those who can remember it , seems largely modelled on the old estate duty .
9 The grounds of some of the larger National Trust properties are ideal for those who can push themselves around , and in many cases fairly long distances can be covered .
10 The Italian thinks that if he can ever sing Puccini the climax of his life has been reached ; but even so , with all the omissions that can be charged against Italy — such that as a musical country she ceased to exist after the seventeenth century and has certainly reached deliquescence with Messrs Malpiero , Pratella and Co — she even now does produce from time to time singers who are not merely singers but great artists , as Battistini who , at over 60 , is an example for those who can take it of the extent to which a voice can be preserved in all its beauty when it is used as a musical instrument and not as a fog siren or a pair of nutcrackers . ’
11 We doubt whether the shock-horror TV advertising campaign will directly stop youngsters sniffing solvents , but it should bring home the horrors of the practice to those who can do something about it parents .
12 It has been shown how elderly people move closer to those who can help them sustain their independence , rather than aiming to move in with relatives .
13 I think erm I think is quite fair maybe if concessions could be raised to one fifty or two pounds but overall I think that people who can afford it spend such a lot of money on the raffle and we therefore give raffle tickets to those who can afford it could jealousy and on the raffle generally about a hundred pounds is made and if there , if there was more charge for tickets , people might not give so much for the raffles and also if you give but if you charge them a nominal sum and then shove other things at them on their options they might be more willing to give to optional choices like a raffle .
14 However , in contrast to those who can see nothing good in this type of organisation , Burns and Stalker argue that this type of organisation may be appropriate to an organisation operating within a particular environment .
15 But note that each cycle depends on communication of emerging ideas to those who can use them ; hence the importance of telling others about one 's findings and ideas and of finding out what others have reported about one 's own current concerns .
16 But note that each cycle depends on communication of emerging ideas to those who can use them ; hence the importance of telling others about one 's findings and ideas and of finding out what others have reported about one 's own current concerns .
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