Example sentences of "[pron] [adj] for [adj] people " in BNC.

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1 Well I work as a psychotherapist and it seems to me that for some people change is impossible and when that is the case then its my job to help them to come to terms with who they are and what they are and how there going to remain , but the other side of it is helping people to change and I have to say usually its to loose weight , that 's the biggest reason people want to change .
2 In fact I have not met a single teacher who does not want to be their best and do their best for young people , even though what this means in practice is very different for different teachers .
3 At the lowest level in the TNC hierarchy , the operatives , there is clearly a reputational element at work , in so far as working for a company that has an international name appears to mean something positive for most people .
4 As well as marking Oxfam 's 50th anniversary , it 's also Leap Year which means that we all have an extra day to do something special for other people and to help Oxfam work towards making the world a fairer place .
5 It enables everyone involved to understand the Process that is going on , it makes it possible for grieving people to be looked after for a while , but not to sink into a chronic mourning state , because everyone knows when it is meant to be finished , and when the bereaved people are meant to pick up their responsibilities again .
6 Disability Working Allowance will make it easier for disabled people to take up a job .
7 The UK 's largest friendly society , Family Assurance , has joined forces with the medical group Private Patients Plan ( PPP ) to make it easier for young people to buy their first home , with a policy called Generation Builder .
8 Dr Walter Kilner developed some screens filled with a dicyanin solution which sensitized the eyes and made it easier for more people to see the aura .
9 The bill also made permanent changes in the system in order to make it easier for more people to qualify for extended jobless benefits in the future .
10 This debate has its origins in Laski 's deprecation of the narrow social basis of recruitment into the higher civil service in Britain , making it impossible for such people to understand working-class problems ( Laski 1938 ) ; and Kingsley 's prediction that an unrepresentative bureaucracy would block radical reformist policies and therefore threaten democracy ( Kingsley 1944 ) .
11 Thus Deacon has shown how ‘ the genuinely seeking work test ’ was manipulated in the 1920s to make it difficult for unemployed people to establish their claim to benefit .
12 But by being ashamed of who they are , they 're making it harder for other people to accept them . ’
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