Example sentences of "one [Wh pn] have [verb] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Even The Builder 's apparently factual report was criticized by ‘ One who had peeped behind the scenes ’ for having implied that the earlier delegation of MPs supporting Scott had a lower status because it consisted of amateurs rather than professionals .
2 So a NZ trained PPL would probably be much more at home with UK weather conditions after qualifying than one who had trained in the USA .
3 And the worst of it all was , Kate was the one who had to listen to the old sod !
4 For one who had to listen to the gloom of the poor Leeds team of the 80 's pre-Wilkinson , I am just excited that we are there or there abouts .
5 No one who had stared into the chaos of the warp , no one whose living was to do so , could be unsophisticated and survive .
6 She was disappointed it was not the one who had kicked in the door .
7 And at night I asked one of the young men who was helping us , one who had come with the carters , to help me load the saint on to the wagon , to go to Ramsey to the aid and succour of our misused house .
8 I recognized him as the man with only three fingers on his left hand — the one who had come to the Admiral Benbow !
9 Eventually they led the one who had spoken into the middle of the room .
10 On the way we passed a very old ran , bent almost double , wearing the uniform of one who had fought with the Czechoslovak Legion in Russia .
11 At yesterday 's launch of Brook 's Impressions de Pelleas , his reworking of Debussy 's opera , Robert Palmer , Glasgow 's director of performing arts , introduced Brook as ‘ one who had brought to the Tramway the hallmark of excellence and established there a benchmark for others ’ achievement . ’
12 There survives a long and highly circumstantial account of his conversation with the Queen when he was newly a professor at Sheffield , and one is seldom in doubt that this is one who has moved among the great , and without strain .
13 He replied , ‘ Like one who has risen in the morning and does not know whether he will be dead in the evening . ’
14 If hesitating between a peach and a pear you languidly inspect sniff and fondle the fruit before deciding for the pear , and eat it slowly with a look of bliss , no one who has left behind the absolutism of childhood ( ‘ Anyone can see that a peach is nicer than a pear ’ ) will doubt that you made the best possible choice between the flavours ; the rightness of the choice , and the objective fact that in the fullest awareness of the two flavours you were spontaneously moved to take the pear , are two sides of the same coin .
15 Jesus , the Christ , is the one who has come through the water of his baptism , through the blood of his cross , and is mediated to us through the Holy Spirit .
16 The curious , at times seemingly perverse , ambiguity in which the terms of the contract are from time to time expressed is an added reason why no one who has to wrestle with the problems which abound in this area should fail to arm himself with this book .
17 On the contrary Corinth was very rich in agricultural land , as no one who has climbed to the top of the Akrokorinth can doubt .
18 The Medical Research Council 's Common Cold Research Unit showed that it is not the person who gets caught in the rain or sits in a draught who is likely to develop a cold but the one who has to work in the air-conditioned , centrally-heated , artificially-lit atmosphere found in many modern office blocks .
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