Example sentences of "[noun] [prep] which [noun sg] [vb mod] have " in BNC.

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1 In a piece of fancy footwork of which Gekko would have been proud , America 's fat cats have capped a record year by undermining President-Elect Bill Clinton 's plans to soak the rich , before he has even set foot in the White House .
2 The village of Weston in which Leapor would have lived for some time was six miles north of Brackley .
3 It has no cellars in which material could have been stored for safety , and it is not known how much had been removed elsewhere .
4 Because , as far as Juliet could see , there were two ways in which Donna could have received her AB blood group .
5 First , it kept the school-leaver within the realms of dependence , emphasizing the need for guidance and employment advice ; and , secondly , it led to the eruption of a lively dispute between the Board of Education and the Board of Trade over which department should have final authority for adolescent workers in the administration of the Labour Exchanges Act 1909 .
6 In this section , I have offered an analysis of rationality , by showing three levels on which rationality can have practical effects .
7 Wasps still show the stages by which colonialism may have developed .
8 Whereas the counsellor can hope to point retired people towards new activities and new sources of friendship , the loss of income associated with retirement is a matter over which counselling can have little direct influence .
9 This can not be accepted , for there was no other way in which evolution could have prospered .
10 D c c could you have visualized any way in which production could have been controlled apart from his down about a certain amount ?
11 However , Schäuble said that any refugee who had arrived via a third country in which asylum could have been requested would be sent back , and that reciprocal expulsion arrangements with Poland and Czechoslovakia would be renegotiated to reduce the numbers of asylum-seekers .
12 However , we can say that even historic cost accounting , in times of rising prices , does provide some indication of the extent to which capital might have been eroded or maintained , which as we have suggested earlier is potentially useful information .
13 The old vision of the centrality of the railways was replaced by a set of counterfactual conditionals , estimations of the extent to which development could have taken place without the railway .
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