Example sentences of "[art] [noun pl] [pron] give " in BNC.

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1 The dilemma can be expressed as follows : the more accessible teachers seek to make themselves to all their pupils as individuals , the less time they have for direct , extended and challenging interaction with any of them ; but the more time they devote to such extended interaction with some children , the less demanding on them as teachers must be the activities they give to the rest ; and the less demanding an activity is of their time and attention as teachers , the more the likelihood that the activity in question will demand little of the child .
2 I therefore completed to his satisfaction all the forms he gave me , and I gave him a detailed written description of our proposal , and a revised working drawing showing greater detail , with both of which he seemed satisfied .
3 The solicitors who gave him the court order for them to release all the details on that .
4 There are a great number of anomalies in the accounts he gave .
5 But there is some instability in the accounts he gives of dark professions of faith , in his acerbities and fatalities .
6 On paper , Olympia & York still looked like a good thing to the institutions who gave their money .
7 To understand this process , we have to look at the experiences of students themselves , and the meanings they give to their education .
8 Humans do not just react to fire , they act upon it in terms of the meanings they give to it .
9 He also praised ‘ his labours and inventions in tin matters ’ , a reflection of the mines which gave Godolphin a large part of his wealth and influence in his county .
10 Other titles adopted by rulers give less precise help : for instance , the coins which give Edward III the title ‘ King of France ’ were minted after 1337 .
11 I never ceased to be astounded by how quickly and thoroughly he absorbed the notes I gave him . ’
12 They are normally tame and approachable , allowing a look at the large beak with the crossed-over tips to the mandibles which gives the bird its name .
13 I mean I , see the tablets you gave him ?
14 Some features of that world are nowadays entirely inscrutable — notably , what it was in Frederic Lowndes 's self-effacing position on The Times which gave him and his wife access to a society of international aristocracy and even royalty , and to the inner circles of the cabinet , as well as the society of novelists and playwrights .
15 From my own experience of listening to nurses who want to return , the reasons they give and the levels of motivation they express are multifarious .
16 This change in female initiation patterns is also reflected in the reasons they gave for experimentation with heroin in the first place .
17 The same committee on the same day had considered Mr. Choudhury 's appeal and the reasons they gave in that case are impeccable .
18 I agree with it and for the reasons he gives I would allow the appeal .
19 I agree with it and for the reasons he gives I would allow the appeal .
20 I agree with it , and for the reasons he gives would dismiss this appeal .
21 My Lords , I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech of my noble and learned friend , Lord Templeman , and for the reasons he gives I , too , would allow the appeal and dismiss the plaintiffs ' action .
22 I agree with it , and for the reasons he gives would allow the appeal .
23 I agree with it and for the reasons he gives I , too , would allow the appeal .
24 I agree with it and for the reasons he gives I , too , would allow the appeal .
25 I have had the advantage of reading in draft the opinion of my noble and learned friend , Lord Templeman , and for the reasons he gives I , too , would allow the appeal .
26 My Lords , I agree with the speech of my noble and learned friend , Lord Templeman , that this appeal must be allowed for the reasons he gives .
27 On that issue , I agree with my noble and learned friend , Lord Goff of Chieveley , that , for the reasons he gives , it is appropriate to do so .
28 My Lords , I agree with my noble and learned friend , Lord Keith of Kinkel , whose draft speech I have had the opportunity to read , that for the reasons he gives the appeal should be allowed and the questions answered in the way he proposes .
29 We can see no merit in repeating here the reasons he gave for that decision since he pronounced his findings in that case in public , pursuant to rule 11(2) of the Hearings before the Visitors Rules 1991 , and the reasons were complex .
30 Physics is interesting in having connotations of both : as a physical science , its discoveries ( and the skills it gives to its graduates ) have obvious uses for industry ; while its status as a ‘ pure ’ rather than an ‘ applied ’ science gives it the appearance of being removed from the uses to which it may be put .
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