Example sentences of "[Wh pn] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Dad and Eva would come back late , and I 'd get up to see them and hear , as they undressed , who 'd said what to whom about the latest play , or novel , or sex-scandal .
2 There are also differences in the schools that the children attend , in who recognizes whom as a neighbour , and in the use of village shops and other facilities .
3 But , supposing we look at the same material from the standpoint of , say the authors of the Upanishads , with whom as a matter of fact I happen to agree .
4 It remains a holy city for Muslims , Christians and Jews , all of whom for the very best of reasons — they are the good guys — have slaughtered each other within its walls .
5 ‘ As though princes , so young as they be , could not play without their peers , or children without their kindred — with whom for the most part they agree worse than with strangers ! ’
6 He retained contact with another salesman still employed at DPR , whom for the purpose of this book we shall call Peter which is not his real name .
7 Before he reigned he had , by Doña Sancha his wife the Infanta Doña Urraca , his eldest daughter , who was a right excellent lady , and after her he had the Infante Don Sancho , his eldest son and heir ; and then the Infanta Doña Elvira , whom after the death of the King her father , her brother King Don Alfonso married to the Count Don Garcia de Cabra .
8 Sympathy though was maintained for birth parents who through no ‘ fault ’ of their own ( for example , chronic mental illness ) were unable to care for them or visit .
9 It calls us to identify with a Christ who through the horror of the crucifixion leads us , his people , to new life and hope .
10 However , as we have seen , central government , who through the SEC has boldly pressed on with the introduction of the GCSE , has even in doing so been subject to its own and its advisers ' demands that Standards should be preserved .
11 Who through the attention of Mr. Creed , and Mr. Lord his assistant secretary , many hundreds were permitted to do so . ’
12 It is the work of the resulting army of dedicated and sincere reformers who through the centuries have fought to make mankind accept that the Second Choice is the right one , that has provided , and will go on providing for ever , the real power for the production of the good that will be assigned to the storehouse that is the Created God .
13 Barth was deeply suspicious of this entire concern , which he had earlier tried to combat in Gogarten , who through the 1920s had developed a strong interest in the theology of ‘ the orders of creation ’ .
14 Its first owners were a noble Florentine family — the Pucci family — who through the generations , owned it , lost it and repossessed it on several occasions .
15 Expatriates , who between the wars numbered 80,000 in a city of half a million , began to depart .
16 This view seems to have rubbed off on foreign , non-Marxist interpreters of the passage of NEP , who as a whole are inclined to think that a cultural policy of laissez-faire was pursued throughout NEP .
17 He had heard so much about it from the Queen Mother — who as a child had been there every year — and from so many other people that he had felt it was a part of his education that was sorely lacking .
18 In the early hours of yesterday morning they were beaten in four sets by Patrick McEnroe and Jim Grabb , and then some 13 hours later they fell 6-3 , 7-6 , 7-6 to the Australians Darren Cahill and Mark Kratzman , who as a result qualified for the semi-finals .
19 In the early hours of yesterday morning they were beaten in four sets by Patrick McEnroe and Jim Grabb , and then some 13 hours later they fell 6-3 , 7-6 , 7-6 to the Australians Darren Cahill and Mark Kratzman , who as a result qualified for the semi-finals .
20 ‘ It 's a tight-knit community up here , ’ said Major Mike Marks , 69 , who as a young soldier was on anti-invasion duties .
21 ‘ But I feel dismay , sorrow , for so many people in our country who do not share this personal good fortune and who as a result of further years of Tory government will experience further disadvantage .
22 A tutor-organiser ( or equivalent ) who as a professional employee is susceptible to discipline if he or she proves negligent or misguided , can help to ensure that the voluntary movement lives up to its obligations — through advice and encouragement as far as possible , through seizing the initiative himself if there is no alternative .
23 The man chosen was Russell Butler , a research student in social history at the University of London , who as a part-time tutor had taken the first course for apprentices at Marconi and had greatly impressed both here and in other courses for the branches in Hemel Hempstead and St. Albans .
24 We phoned a good , dear friend who as a midwife had gone to much trouble and arranged to deliver the baby .
25 One great-grandfather had been an inventor , ‘ socially in a higher class ’ , while another family claimed ‘ a good background somewhere ’ through a great-grandmother who as a maid had eloped with a young aristocratic gambler .
26 Sir Andrew Derbyshire , who as a young architect with Sheffield City Council was part of the steering committee 30 years ago , has agreed to serve again , and the chairman will be Frank Duffy of DEGW , who is now the RIBA 's Vice-President for Marketing .
27 The horror of the Strathnaver clearances was eventually exposed by Donald Macleod , who as a young boy had been evicted by Seller from the village of Rossal .
28 President Kennedy , who as a young competitive swimmer had learned the Kahanamoku Kick , asked to meet him .
29 Sir Matt Busby , who as a Manchester City player often appeared against what he calls ‘ the magnificent Arsenal of the early Thirties ’ , describes the key role played by Alex James ( whom he knew and idolized as a boy in the Glasgow suburbs of their youth ) : ‘ James was the great creator from the middle .
30 Derby 's Government in the Commons was led by the Leader of the House and Chancellor of the Exchequer , Benjamin Disraeli , who as a member of the Select Committee which examined the 1855 Act and Hall 's Committee of 1856 was well aware of the need for a new Foreign Office .
  Next page