Example sentences of "in [Wh det] they " in BNC.

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1 Up to 65 protesters were reported to have been burned to death when security forces set fire to a shopping centre in which they were seeking refuge .
2 He made these three-liners into sardonic comments which undercut the banalities of the newspaper in which they appeared .
3 Battle , Murder , and Death , Venuses and Psyches , the bloody and voluptuous , are the things in which they seem to delight : and these are portrayed in a cold , hard , and often tawdry style , with an almost universal deficiency of chiaroscuro ; the whole artificial , labored and theatrical .
4 One incidental advantage of personality pieces is that the magazines in which they appear may be able to afford good-quality colour reproductions .
5 Both novels see the world in colonial colours — as determined by empires , in the furtherance of which races have defeated and enslaved each other , in which they have met and married , in which a black mercenary might marry a daughter of Venice .
6 WE live at a time when reporters go to foreign countries where there is trouble and come back to write books in which they say that it was hard to make out what was going on .
7 He said your body is like a book in which men may read strange things , a foreign country in which they may travel with delight .
8 Already , in expectation , the four archbishops had produced a pastoral letter in which they condemned the legalizing of divorce on the grounds of the preservation of ‘ the common good ’ and because they feared the tendency that people had to accept as right that which was legally permissible ( Irish Episcopal Conference 1985 ) .
9 Before each round of a team match the team 's representative must hand in a list of competitors to the area scorekeeper , specifying the order in which they will compete .
10 We should note , however , that loneliness is itself a feature of many Canadian writers , fruit of that belittling vastness of country in which they are placed .
11 In the year in which they met , 1954 , Layton had two books of poetry published — he does nothing by halves ! — and Leonard was clearly dazzled by the man 's prolific genius .
12 From a functionalist perspective , mental processes are inferred processes — they gain their status in our theoretical base not as a result of being directly observed or experienced , but from the way in which they enable us to understand and explain human behaviour .
13 In particular there is the intriguing finding that some amnesics can learn certain new skills as quickly as normal subjects , even though they are often unable to remember the circumstances in which they learnt them .
14 Everyone has a right to be buried in the churchyard of the parish in which they die — assuming that one exists , and that there is space left .
15 This factsheet can only suggest some of the ways in which they may help you .
16 When choreographers decide to commission music , they should first give the composer an outline of the plot , roughly suggesting the sequence of the action , the likely entrances and exits for the characters and the dances or brief scenes in which they are involved .
17 Choreographers must have been dancers themselves if they are to understand and feel the natural abilities of the body and to allow fur the influence of the techniques in which they have been trained .
18 The dancers or players in a theme ballet will need to convey the general atmosphere and any other element pertinent to the situation in which they find themselves , as well as the mood and content of the music chosen to give them phrasing .
19 Nevertheless the three dancers in Monotones are expressing their close relationship to each other and to the space in which they dance and above all to the flowing lines of the design and of the musical phrases .
20 Pointes can and do have an enormous part to play in classical ballet because there are so many ways in which they can be used to give character and variety to a role .
21 The types of character and the plots in which they play have existed since the Dorian mimes first began to lay the foundations of the theatre .
22 They can fill the space in which they move by the amalgamation of steps , poses and gestures , which can travel in any direction and dimension ( see page 69 ) .
23 No matter how well intentioned an author may be , no matter how good his work is considered , a lavish photographic book of this kind , and of this price , must stand or fall on the sheer quality of the pictures selected and the way in which they are presented .
24 He plays with the quintet in a quite different sense from that in which they play at revolutionary politics ; though , bemused by him , set at odds , their purposes deflected and their fantasies fed and coaxed along , it does n't seem like playing to them .
25 For this purpose some printers can be put into a special mode in which they print the escape sequences rather than interpret them .
26 One contributor to Re-Reading English wants to deconstruct Shakespeare and his texts into the socio-economic-cultural-political contexts in which they originated .
27 I believe profoundly in all these things , it goes without saying ; my difficulty lies in knowing how defensible they are in the form in which they are visibly institutionalized in the anglophone academy .
28 Utterances about literature make sense , and are generally understood , within the form of life in which they are habitually made .
29 Unfortunately the tone in which they are expressed , and the language they are couched in , prevent our taking them in that way , and recall for us rather the heads of Auden 's indictment : ‘ lazy … too easily bored … persuaded beyond argument … ’
30 This is what Eliot means by insisting : ‘ It is necessary to consider Pound 's literary pronouncements in the light of the circumstances in which they were written … ’
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