Example sentences of "[Wh det] [vb -s] [adv] the [adj] and " in BNC.
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1 | Mansell 's appeal , which involves only the fine and not his subsequent ban from the Spanish Grand Prix , will be heard on 18 October . |
2 | Most of the nuclear increases result from cost increases by British Nuclear Fuels , the reprocessing body which supplies both the civil and military atomic programme . |
3 | Neither is it necessary to have what is known as a ‘ spiritual experience ’ — a single moment in time when the individual has a sense of himself and of the world in a way which transcends both the physical and the psychological . |
4 | The panels therefore are a contribution by the guidance staff to a total school philosophy which includes continuous assessment , a school-based certificate in years three and four which covers both the cognitive and affective domains and which is wholly positive in its comments , and mixed-ability teaching in years one and two . |
5 | Development Policy towards women in less developed countries has changed from one which saw them only as mothers , to a more holistic approach which emphasizes both the productive and reproductive roles of Women . |
6 | He relates this to the state of culture of his own age , facing dangers of over-specialization , which impoverishes both the religious and artistic sensibilities by separating each from the other , so that only ‘ the vestige of manners may be left for those who , having their sensibility uninformed either by religion or by art , … have nothing left but an inherited behaviour which ceases to have meaning ’ . |
7 | A wound has been defined as an injury which breaks both the outer and inner skin — a bruise or a burst blood-vessel in an eye would not amount to a wound . |
8 | Without hearing , it was thought , neither language or intellect could be acquired , which explains why the deaf and dumb were ignored by educators and shunned by hearing people generally until the miracle of San Salvador . |
9 | To Arnold the term philistine implied the idea of something stiff-necked and perverse in its resistance to light — ‘ and therein it specially suits our middle class , who not only do not pursue sweetness and light , but who even prefer to them that sort of machinery of business , chapels , tea-meetings and addresses from Mr Murphy , which makes up the dismal and illiberal life on which I have so often touched ’ . |