Example sentences of "[prep] [noun pl] of which [pron] [vb mod] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Jakobson 's answer to this argument is , however , a powerful one : all users of a language must necessarily know the system of categories into which its different elements are divided , even if only unconsciously ; and his analysis of poetry does not claim to represent what goes on in the reader 's mind , but to account for the special effect which the poetry , for reasons of which he may well be unaware , exercises on him .
2 Obviously they can not be expected to vet all the publications they sell , and it would be grossly unfair to hold them responsible for libels of which they could have no knowledge .
3 It aims to secure both that the consumer is not misled and also that he is not left in ignorance of matters of which he should lie informed .
4 In short , we now have a wealth of riches of which we can be proud .
5 With many populations we are already aware that the units fall into sub-groups of which we would wish to take account in any sampling .
6 The first of these concerns the attempt to construct a general theoretical framework in terms of which we can answer the ‘ limited ’ particular questions of the second .
7 This suggests that what Mill may have meant in saying that one pleasure is of higher quality than another is that it may be pleasanter without there being a quantifiable relation between them , in terms of which there must be some amount of the second which is as worth while , in hedonic terms , as the first .
8 Broken by seas of which they could drink nothing .
  Next page