Example sentences of "which [verb] many " in BNC.

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1 Policy-making is inevitably , and universally , a long , drawn-out process which involves many people within the organisation .
2 More generously , the head accepts a role which involves many menial chores and tasks as a means of encouraging continuity and high level performance from staff and pupils .
3 The Mani , which offers many curious experiences , has none more bizarre than this .
4 To enter a tournament , players must be registered members/players of the LTA , which offers many benefits as well as giving a rating .
5 The pavement was made in the famous Corinium workshop at Cirencester , which produced many mosaics for other Roman villas in the Cotswolds .
6 The acquisition policy was complemented by an aggressive branch opening programme , which produced many of the Edwardian banking halls that still dominate British high streets today .
7 Norman also established a breeding stud of racehorses which produced many classic winners .
8 The pressures which led many noblemen to sell their land were largely beyond the control of the State .
9 Similarly , for ‘ Astrilly ’ , a song about the plight of the suffering pit men , which led many to resort to emigration ( often to Australia : ‘ Astrilly ’ ) , Corvan makes use of the traditional tune , ‘ All Around My Hat ’ , with its history of texts to do with farewell and absence , here transposed from the sphere of love to that of work .
10 It was fear of the Soviet military threat which led many US administrations to work for the political unification of Europe — a process in many ways inimical to their own interests — and to urge the United Kingdom to play her part .
11 Hitting the target : ‘ The way information is presented can make all the difference to whether your publication hits its target or is consigned , unread , to the waste-bin , ’ says Peter Brigg , head of BP 's Employee Communications & services team ( ECS ) , which produces many of the company 's corporate publications .
12 The Ogallala aquifer , which supplies many farms in the US Midwest , is suffering the same problem , as also are aquifers in Spain , Greece and elsewhere in Europe .
13 SEGLAB could include a ‘ lip-smackin ’ rule as in HWIM which detected the sort of voiceless burst which precedes many utterances .
14 So even if ministerial loyalties make it hard to admit it , he probably shares the apprehension which haunts many others as they contemplate this Bill : that though , at the end of the day , quantity will increase , quality will diminish ; or to put it in a form of words which trips easily off Conservative lips on other occasions — that More is going to mean Worse .
15 It is a relationship of commitment and estrangements which haunts many activists , not only in the cosmopolitan community of socialists in London , but within the Northern working class itself .
16 It even had a shot at controlling motorway service areas , provoking a debate which encapsulated many of the attitudes of the time .
17 Community relations are being closely monitored for the 1930s and the last fifteen years of the Northern Ireland conflict and a comparison is being made with Liverpool which shared many of Glasgow 's communal tensions to an even more marked degree .
18 But towards the end of the eighteenth century the courts developed what Jay Cohen calls ‘ a more expansive definition ’ of the term , which made many non-traders eligible for discharge in bankruptcy .
19 Sixth , the leadership demonstrated abysmal judgment , evinced by the distasteful triumphalism in Sheffield , which made many supporters cringe , and waverers recoil .
20 Paul Girouard in The Return to Camelot pointed out that the chivalric code of conduct ‘ never recovered from the Great War partly because the War itself was such a shattering of illusions , partly because it helped to produce a world in which the necessary conditions for chivalry were increasingly absent ’ and that the absence of so many men at the Front ‘ had put women in a position of responsibility which made many of them distrust chivalry as a form of concealed slavery ’ .
21 Moreover he omits , virtually without mention , the extraordinary improvements made in English industrial life , and elsewhere , in the second half of the nineteenth century and which made many of these towns what they are today .
22 In the non-European world it was the requirement to provide separate facilities for a complex hierarchy of class and race which made many railway stations larger affairs than they need otherwise have been .
23 The very considerations which make many so anxious to establish that value judgements are objective , a sense of the urgent social need of common rules , disquiet at the anarchic consequences of everyone doing as he likes , have had the effect of raising irrelevant doubts about that objectivity .
24 But it was the manner of that ejection which offended many .
25 He left an unfinished autobiography which offended many .
26 You were responding to our article about dog licensing and welfare ( License to Kill ) , and your angry , passionate letters ( ‘ tears are running down my face as I write ’ ) clearly showed that dog welfare , and the tremendous problem of strays , are issues which occupy many minds .
27 Each user can hold many paths each of which holds many path items .
28 Also in Caerleon is the Roman Legionary Museum which holds many fascinating artefacts excavated from the remains .
29 Uneven development , and in particular the decline of the older industrialized regions , was therefore intensified by policies of corporate restructuring , which moved many non-productive functions to the south .
30 The old test-piece Pepsicomane , a hard 6b , locates the sector which contains many classics of 5c/6a : Franco-Belge , Marabunta , Touloum and others .
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