Example sentences of "of [adv] people " in BNC.

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1 The critical problem for Esperanto , as for any other artificial language , is that it is not really worth learning until a lot of already people speak it .
2 A lot of countries do n't have control over their own economies , they do n't have control over things like whether of not people are going to have jobs , whether or not people are going to make a livelihood , whether or not people are going to even be able to live in the country , because in Ireland something like 1000 people a week are leaving the country in order to get work .
3 If evolutionary studies provided a vertical dimension within which objects could signify the development of societies , this was complemented by the growth of diffusionary studies in which the horizontal distribution of objects over the globe was thought to be further evidence for the movements of both peoples and ideas , for example , from origins in ancient Egypt or Germany .
4 Demographic decentralization may well have preceded the movement of jobs out of the cities but , by the mid-1970s , a self-sustaining centrifugal force was clearly draining the cities of both people and jobs .
5 A plan is needed to study proper names of both people and places .
6 It recommended steps to prevent further growth there and to encourage dispersal of both people and jobs to other parts of the Kingdom .
7 It favoured the second , advocating the establishment of garden cities surrounding London : dispersal and decentralization of both people and employment .
8 A study of how people react in real life when affected by any kind of emotion and mood soon reveals how the movements of the whole body can change .
9 To do this , we must have in our heads a precise but flexible model of how people move .
10 While bird-watching is often used at an early stage in research to try to develop hypotheses and to make sure one does have some idea of how people behave before going any further , there is no reason why one should not develop more systematic recording schedules to standardize the observations and to develop more of a survey approach .
11 To exclude the influence of how people might feel about different types of lender or types of credit , the information was confined to the terms of the loan — so that in effect people were choosing between rival credit terms possibly within a single credit type .
12 In this area of interest one normally looks at the classic work of Bartlett ( 1932 ) as providing the first base for the complex analysis of how people 's thought and language come together in their recall of complex materials .
13 In laboratory experiments , we may be getting a picture of how people behave in laboratories , but can we be sure that this is how they behave in the real world ( see p. 55 ) ?
14 Archaeologists can reveal only very fragmentary glimpses of how people lived at any period , but what they imagined and thought is beyond recovery — the meagre scraps of records are useless or , at best , tantalizing in that they provide details torn from their context .
15 Successful health education/promotion should be grounded in a strong understanding of how people conceptualize their own health .
16 There is little systematic evidence of how people in other cultures get on with one another , but it should be noted that within a tribal community there may be such strong libidinal ties among the members that the interrelations among them appear peaceful , and may be so for quite long periods of time .
17 It is one thing to say that the understanding of how people order their experience is in contrast to the explanation of how the world works .
18 Legal records are unique in giving us an inkling of how people of the age saw the world about them .
19 Many linguists felt that since corpora were finite and degenerate they were unable to deal with many of the phenomena present in language , and could offer no insight to the ’ real ’ question of how people process language .
20 But it is the study of finds , and particularly of finds from many sites over a wide area , that fleshes out that skeleton to give a more complete picture of how people lived .
21 This suggests that ( like general deterrence ) instrumental denunciation can not justify any particular level of severity of punishment ; nor can the penal system ( as is sometimes fondly imagined ) ‘ give a lead ’ to public opinion about the rights and wrongs of how people should behave .
22 We had discussed this business of how people 's appearance literally alters in the eyes of their lovers , and suddenly I blushed , for it seemed to me he must be remembering this too , and that we must be looking for the same thing , as one might take down an old book in a moment of hungry nostalgia and start to re-read , hoping it may provide the same remembered enchantment as before .
23 Thus , the concept of career is essential to an understanding of the impact of ageing on the experience of long-term disability as it allows consideration of how people 's subjective experiences are shaped over time .
24 This still leaves the fundamental question of how people value landscapes , and how different tastes and needs can be catered for .
25 Peter Reid , the factor on Kildalton Estate ( 36 ) , in part of his statement said " I do n't suppose it is of any consequence to advert to the question of how people were removed , but I do n't think we can admit that there were any evictions , and I think there is no need , unless it is wished , to call forward witnesses to show that there were no evictions , at least in the ordinary sense of the word . "
26 We have expectations of how people will behave in certain physical surroundings : a church or a court of law imposes its own social norms .
27 On the basis of this information proportions of population are allocated to each centre giving a realistic model of how people shop .
28 Like the formal approach to organisations , such charts give us a picture of how an organisation works but it is only a partial picture and misses out on the crucial aspect of how people behave within organisations .
29 Here are just a few fictional examples of how people 's quality of life could be improved by community care services :
30 I could give examples of how people have been pursued beyond the grave to pull back a few miserly pounds of poll tax payment .
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