noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
large
▪
One of the largest recipients is Rep.
passive
▪
Underlying the sequence is a view of the learner as a relatively passive recipient of instruction.
▪
Simultaneously, women were conceptualised as the passive recipients of scientific manipulation.
▪
No longer passive recipients of instruction, pupils are encouraged to be active collaborators in the learning process.
▪
However, the railways are not passive recipients of such political pressure, but political actors and manipulators in their own right.
▪
The directly concerned populations are invariably viewed as passive recipients of plans.
▪
These reformers, however, were not passive recipients of a message from on high.
▪
Often they are organized by younger people who merely expect ageing members to be passive recipients of organized events.
social
▪
He wants the retirement age raised to 70 and cost-of-living increases for Social Security recipients reduced.
▪
For example: Do Social Security recipients want government playing the market?
temporary
▪
The following Tuesday morning the embryos are recovered from the temporary recipients .
▪
A third group act as temporary recipients , incubating the newly reconstructed embryos within their oviducts until they reach the blastocyst stage.
■ NOUN
medicare
▪
Can you imagine requiring that all Medicaid and Medicare recipients go to public hospitals?
▪
The result is that the entire cost will be paid out of general Treasury funds, rather than by Medicare recipients .
security
▪
He wants the retirement age raised to 70 and cost-of-living increases for Social Security recipients reduced.
▪
For example: Do Social Security recipients want government playing the market?
welfare
▪
Their plan would also soften the requirement that welfare recipients work.
▪
Six former welfare recipients will be placed at the White House in mostly clerical positions, officials said.
▪
Conservative propagandists have sold taxpayers on the notion that welfare recipients are ingrates dependent on wasteful programs perpetuating idleness.
▪
And a new $ 100 million program would help welfare recipients get to jobs and training.&038;.
▪
As with the stereotyping and stigmatizing of welfare recipients , views about teenage childbearing are frequently extraordinarily simplistic.
▪
Anyway, I see where 35, 000 welfare recipients have been put into workfare jobs in New York City.
▪
He said states should be allowed to drug-test welfare recipients and have the option to refuse benefits to drug abusers.
▪
If a welfare recipient saves enough to buy a car so she can look for work, her grant is reduced.
■ VERB
become
▪
Vicars bribed with halfpennies and were known to pressure parents about what was expected before some one became an appropriate recipient of charity.
▪
She touches a piece of heaven and becomes the recipient of power from an unknown source.
▪
At the very least individuals will become consumers rather than recipients of care.
▪
Parents become the recipients of the Social Security taxes paid by their own children.
▪
But my stage tended to turn into a revolving stage and I became the recipient of endless encores.
give
▪
It's something I can do on long, boring evenings and gives the recipients a lot of pleasure.
▪
The compromise gives new recipients 18 months, with the county option of extending the period to two years.
▪
So aid policies changed in favour of giving the recipient country much greater responsibility.
▪
If we give to personally known recipients , we experience gratification while they experience obligation.
help
▪
And a new $ 100 million program would help welfare recipients get to jobs and training.&038;.
▪
One was the poor, he said, repeating his call for people to help former welfare recipients move into work.
▪
Has it helped or harmed recipients ?
hire
▪
More than $ 300 million would be set aside for new tax credits for businesses who hire welfare recipients .
▪
Clinton is trying to encourage employers to hire welfare recipients through tax breaks and subsidies.
▪
So far, Monsanto has hired five welfare recipients , and its contractors and suppliers have found jobs for roughly 20 more.
▪
For business, there were offers of tax breaks for hiring welfare recipients .
require
▪
It uses digital signatures and requires recipients to download free software to read the electronic postmark.
▪
The federal Family Support Act of 1988 required many welfare recipients to participate in education, training, or work.
▪
Social Security is required to review each recipient whose improvement is considered possible.
▪
The welfare provisions, meanwhile, require states to put recipients to work and penalize those that fail to do so.
▪
That plan also would require all welfare recipients with children 12 weeks old or older to perform some kind of work.
work
▪
If no job after two years of training, recipient must work in community service or public service job.
▪
Their plan would also soften the requirement that welfare recipients work .
▪
The welfare provisions, meanwhile, require states to put recipients to work and penalize those that fail to do so.
▪
The fiscal rub arises because of new mandates that the hours a welfare recipient works gradually increase to 30 per week.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪
welfare recipients
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪
But the institute rarely bothered to check whether the recipients followed through.
▪
Education works only if the recipients really want it.
▪
Support for the latter appears to be ebbing, with the Green alliance the likely recipient of much of the protest vote.
▪
The federal Family Support Act of 1988 required many welfare recipients to participate in education, training, or work.
▪
The success of such programmes depends heavily on how much part their recipients have in their design and execution.
▪
Three minutes later, the computer prints out a list of 60 names of suitable recipients, together with their relevant data.
▪
Tissues and organs were transplanted into 50 recipients.