Example sentences of "[prep] which [pers pn] will return " in BNC.

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1 The Mondays are on their way to Japan to play a one-off show , after which they will return to the UK to begin writing new material .
2 This is a point to which we will return later .
3 This oddity seems most readily explicable in practical terms : probably the heirs of Pamphilus were holding back only on making over the hundred ; as a result only the hundred came into issue ; and because of Scaevola 's proclivity to answering questions concisely ( a point to which we will return ) and ‘ on the facts as stated ’ , the circumstances of the rest of the property were simply left aside .
4 Leaving aside the fact , to which we will return in a moment , that less skilled people can usually be paid less wages than those who are skilled , an important characteristic of craft workers is that they often exercise tight control as an occupation over the job that they do .
5 Of course , middle-class users are also more likely to avoid contact with statutory and voluntary agencies for several reasons ( such as private treatment , or fewer financial problems ) , an important consideration to which we will return in later chapters .
6 This has the advantage from the point of view of the courts of largely relieving them of the necessity to enter into the merits of business judgment , a matter to which we will return below .
7 Undoubtedly the most significant of these in the context of lasers has been that of inhomogeneous broadening , to which we will return .
8 The absence of any figures for turns longer than 60 words after scene six is suggestive of a change in Anderson 's conversational behaviour , to which we will return later .
9 Such doubts as exist stem from the power which curriculum control gives to the curriculum designers ( a topic to which I will return in later chapters ) .
10 Having argued that animals can act intentionally ( to which I will return in the section on autonomy ) , he thinks this to be ‘ possible only for those who are self-conscious ’ ( 1983 : 75 ) .
11 A great deal of ink has been spilled over the nature of indirect duties , to which I will return in the next section .
12 This is a matter to which I will return later .
13 Pop videos themselves are consistently reactionary in their sexual imagery ( and this is an aspect of the cooption of new pop to which I will return ) if only because they draw on visual conventions of masculinity and femininity ( taken from cinema history and television commercials ) that are much more coherent than pop 's adolescent ambiguities .
14 While such phrases do not do justice to its many insights — to which I will return in Chapter 8 — there are nevertheless some serious weaknesses in the approach .
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