Example sentences of "[noun] which he [verb] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 This was discovered in 1925 by an Austrian physicist , Wolfgang Pauli-for which he received the Nobel prize in 1945 .
2 Its successor , The Hand of Ethelberta ( 1876 ) , a comic satire on fashionable London society , was a deliberate attempt to write the kind of fiction which he felt the clients of circulating libraries expected .
3 However , in the context of the volatile reaction , both internal and external , to a relatively mild Agrarian Reform initiative , they may well have served to endorse Castro 's conclusion that the social change which he wanted the revolution to effect in Cuba was incompatible with extremely powerful domestic and foreign economic interests .
4 People like Calum Colvin have shaken that up a little , but even he ends up with a picture which he puts a frame around .
5 Hahnemann was the first to start modifying what he himself had enunciated and towards the end of his life he developed a further series of dilutions which he called the LM potencies , in which the material was diluted 1 in 50,000 at each step , rather than the more usual 1 in 10 or 1 in 100 dilution steps .
6 It is fascinating in this context concerning the spiritual warfare in which we are engaged to notice how he ascribes the work of the Spirit to two juxtaposed concepts : prayer , and the Word of God which he calls the sword of the Spirit .
7 At 11.30 a.m. on 9 February 1839 , north of the Ross Sea , he sighted land in latitude 66–7° S , longitude 162–3° E. This was a group of five islands which he called the Balleny Islands .
8 In his report Prof Friel outlines development plans for the waterfront along the River Foyle , a beautiful natural asset which he claims the people of Derry have turned their backs on .
9 A manager who is held accountable for aspects of performance which he has no power or authority to control is in an impossible position .
10 His nose began to water , and the grime from his lips was carried slowly downwards by the fluid in two , dirty streams which he made no effort to check .
11 One of the biggest items is the complete working model of their life which he bought the children for Christmas all those years ago .
12 Sharpe turned westwards away from the Brussels road which he supposed the Dragoons were guarding .
13 This led him to write a book which he called A Discourse of the Liberty of Prophesying , Shewing the Unreasonableness of Prescribing to Other Men 's Faith and the Iniquity of Persecuting Different Opinions .
14 But now , viewing with angry eyes this childish room with its pathetic neatness , its evidence of small self-sufficiency , the single jar of flowers which he guessed the boy himself had arranged , he was seized with an impotent anger against the drunken slut next door .
15 And he retains the sense of wry humour which he reckons every newspaperman needs , if only to keep him sane .
16 Station officer John Finlay said there were 50 tonnes of hay and an estimated ten tonnes of straw which he had no option but to allow to burn out .
17 The question was not whether the judge had made a wrong decision but whether he had inquired into and decided a matter which he had no right to consider .
18 The Theosophist Geoffrey Hodson gives detailed descriptions of various elemental beings which he had the ability to observe in various natural locations .
19 So when the male of such a species approaches a female hanging , large and menacing , on her web , or lurking hidden beside it , he signals to her by twanging the threads at one side in a special and meaningful way which he trusts the female will recognise .
20 A subject 's performance on an experimental task may depend not only on the way which he encodes the stimuli but also on the strategy he adopts in carrying out the task .
21 Already in 1093 and 1094 , before he received the pallium , he had had two acrimonious disputes about the services which he owed the king as one of the greatest territorial magnates of the kingdom , and it was a third territorial dispute in 1097 which finally made him resolve to leave England .
22 This influences the expectations that the public in Easton have of the police , and of their role in the community — a point which one constable made by explaining that one resident in Easton , upon finding himself locked out of his home , called at the station asking for the duplicate set of keys to his house which he thought the police would routinely possess for the residents ' benefit ; phone calls from the public asking for air and train information also sometimes occur .
23 He had an expensive ‘ bijou ’ residence with fluorescent tubes running under the banisters and a Music Centre with a huge bank of switches and buttons which he had no idea how to use .
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