Example sentences of "[Wh det] [vb -s] [pers pn] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 As an alternative , radio versions are now available at economic prices ; these allow virtually unrestricted movement to the wearer , the signals being picked up by a special receiver which passes them on to the camcorder via a short cable connection .
2 Their views are then taken forward to the Central Association which passes them on to the Bank through forums such as the Joint Consultative Committee .
3 When it is obvious that the other 11 Governments are prepared to accept the draft before them at Maastricht today and that this Government are not , the Government are confessing to a unique combination of political prejudice and economic weakness which marks them out from the rest of the Community and which marks Britain down in the Community .
4 There is nothing about this combination of themes which marks it out as the exclusive preserve of the right .
5 There is nothing which cuts him off from the early sociologists in his basic assumptions about the importance of instincts and their interaction with men 's cultures .
6 Which leads us on to the big selling point of these guitars , since this is the first time a production Telecaster has been fitted with a five-way switch .
7 But the notion of the ‘ analytic ’ graduate also raises some difficult questions about the impact of the undergraduate curriculum on student development , which leads us on to the next chapter .
8 He likes to recall China 's ‘ 5,000 year-old tradition of history ’ ( which takes us back to the mythical Yellow Emperor ) and urges China 's battered intellectuals to revive their patriotic spirit .
9 Absolute exemption from restriction or regulation is never obtained : circumstances , social or economic , may have altered , since they obtained acceptance , in such a way as to call for a fresh examination ; there may be some exorbitance or special feature in the individual contract which takes it out of the accepted category : but the court however must be persuaded of this before it calls upon the relevant party to justify a contract of this kind .
10 I , I , I think he described them as light granite , but , but actually of a manmade material , which is being used at the moment in Nottingham on a something called a heritage walk which takes you up to the lace market in Nottingham .
11 And er I went with my dad and got into the cage which takes you down to the pit bottom and er er er immediately the cage left the surface it just dropped like a stone and I myself was frightened that the bottom of the cage collapsed completely .
12 With such a wide definition , it might be more useful to consider what this leaves out , rather than what it includes — which gets us back to the categories I am working with here : it excludes inheritance and invention .
13 It was also a shot which sets us up for the glorious conclusion to the match in the Singles the following day .
14 A successful private deal also means that creditors and shareholders have reached a voluntary consensus , which binds them in to the firm 's future health .
15 First is the inadequate definition of gold and silver , which leaves it up to the jury empanelled by the coroner , to whom the objects have been handed over , to decide if they are treasure or not .
16 Which brings me on to the major bookshop sellers , led by two strong titles :
17 Which brings me back to the sermon with which I started .
18 A modern Roman Catholic authority recounts a story which brings them up to the fourth century — the time of Constantine .
19 MTh students who have no previous knowledge of Hebrew do a special one-year course which brings them up to the level necessary for research in Old Testament Studies .
20 ‘ Increasingly more training is having to be organised internally , which brings us up against the major constraint of time ’ …
21 ‘ Increasingly more training is having to be organised internally , which brings us up against the major constraints of staff time ’ …
22 Which brings us back to the Southern Effect .
23 Which brings us back to the beginning , and the need to recognise a horse 's emotions and to respond to them in a way which will not rouse the horse 's fear or anger .
24 Which brings us back to the Communist Party itself .
25 Which brings us back to the Ukraine , where Volkov was born .
26 Which brings us back to the old problem , ’ she finished on a slightly bitter note .
27 All of which brings us back to the 1987 State of World Population Report and its coded messages .
28 The high speed turn at the bottom of the wave which brings you back up the same wave enabling you to continue your ride in .
29 What keeps it up in the — ’ Gurder began .
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