Example sentences of "which enable [pron] [to-vb] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Nurse managers have a responsibility for the settings in which patients are cared for which is far greater than the same responsibility of nurses at large , simply because they are employed in positions which enable them to make appropriate representations .
2 For instance , at Sussex University we have developed a system called Pop Eleven , which , like BASIC , is fully interactive , like PASCAL , has structures which enable you to do complex things .
3 But I would opt for a self-catering package which enable you to take full advantage of the excellent weekly markets .
4 At that time Poole , like John , had to rely on stage presence more than technique , but he had a powerful personality and a quick intelligent appreciation of character which enabled him to give memorable performances in many of John 's early ballets .
5 Dave Holding , the British No 1 , looked capable of repeating his 1989 triumph until Wesley produced a devastating finish on Birdcage Walk which enabled him to slice 70 seconds off the record .
6 Sheer mental power was the ability which Coleridge possessed which enabled him to accomplish this feat , as he does in ‘ Frost at Midnight ’ , when , sitting in his cottage he takes in the ‘ Sea , hill , and wood This populous village ! … with all the numberless goings on of life . ’
7 In 1990 Chevallier won a Northern Arts travel award which enabled her to spend six weeks in New York .
8 With a career as an actress already established it was the success of Lynda La Plante 's 12 part series for Euston Films , WIDOWS , ( 1982 ) , which enabled her to concentrate full time on writing .
9 A number of studies have brought out the bargaining strength of trade unions during the period of near full employment [ Brown , 1981 ] , which enabled them to reinforce long-established work practices which were an incubus on British industry in the form of overmanning .
10 They even took pride in developing new skills which enabled them to use difficult machines which inexperienced people could not use .
11 By bourgeoisification , Taylor is referring to the increasing emphasis within the game on comfort and entertainment manifested in such developments as the reconstruction of grounds as commercial stadia ( with covered stands , seats and floodlights ) , the payment of large transfer fees and the freedom of contract for players which enabled them to command large salaries .
12 The high level of enquiries resulted in another intensive year 's effort by the tendering teams which enabled us to submit more tenders by number and value than we did in 1991 .
13 Once again , the reader is very impressed by Dickens ' use of the language and we find he has a subtle comic gift which enables him to add witty scenes to this serious novel .
14 I use a Shakespeare 13ft match rod , which enables me to play big fish on light tackle without undue fear of breakage .
15 She was born in the Rhondda Valley in 1939 and trained at the Birmingham College of Art and Crafts and at the Royal Academy Schools in 1965 , when she was living in Smethwick in the West Midlands , she won a Cinzano Art Foundation Award with her painting The Whale , which enables her to spend six months at the Academy of Fine Art in Rome .
16 Your notebook is the tool which enables you to take any experience , any observation , any physical sensation and turn it into something which can be shared by others .
17 The F-Plan is the first slimming diet which enables you to follow this formula .
18 Er and we we want to be able to have a mechanism within our I S O Nine Thousand system , which enables us to tackle different jobs of different , different complexity .
19 Our experience of particular communicative situations teaches us what to expect of that situation , both in a general predictive sense ( e.g. the sort of attitudes which are likely to be expressed , the sort of topics which are likely to be raised ) which gives rise to notions of ‘ appropriacy ’ , and in a limited predictive sense which enables us to interpret linguistic tokens ( e.g. deictic forms like here and now ) in the way we have interpreted them before in similar contexts .
20 ‘ We sit down and negotiate lines of credit with leasing companies , which enables us to make quick purchasing decisions knowing that the credit is there , ’ said Mr Salway .
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