Example sentences of "[Wh det] in [noun sg] [verb] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 In the sea , the complexities are compounded by tides and currents , bringing pollutants sometimes from thousands of miles away , and from the sheer number of possible sources of pollutant — sewage works , factories , and agricultural fields — which feed into the rivers which in turn run into the sea .
2 But within the arts , and indeed within any one discipline or medium , one can distinguish the ‘ scholarly ’ emphasis on textual and historical accuracy from the more interpretative and responsive ‘ readings ’ , which in turn differ from the active , creative mode of ‘ doing ’ the arts .
3 The ease with which one can learn a concept depends critically on the structure of the predicate p , which in turn depends on the description language .
4 The selling price of a book stems principally from the number of copies which are printed , which in turn depends upon the publisher 's estimate of the likely demand for the book .
5 The phenomena of the longue durée are background conditions that help to explain conjonctures , which in turn contribute to the explanation of événements .
6 For every word ending in the letter sequence -ing , there is a separate set of three nodes in the tree , one for the i , which points to the node for the n , which in turn points to the node for the g .
7 ‘ A cop is what a single woollen thread is wound onto , which in turn fits inside the shuttles for the weft looms .
8 He became increasingly authoritarian and reliant upon the army , which in turn led to the eight years of Amin 's rule , the Tanzanian invasion , Obote 's second government and ultimately the civil war in which Museveni took power .
9 I had brought off a successful forced landing , with no damage to man or machine , and afterwards I was able to describe the symptoms which led to the failure , which in turn led to the fault being found and cured .
10 It failed because it precipitated a managerial revolution in Courtaulds , which in turn led to the defeat of the bid and the rapid recovery of the company .
11 The reduction in inhibition allows greater expression of the NMDA receptor system which in turn contributes to the depolarization and thus further reduces the level of the Mg 2+ block .
12 Secondly , it is well known that the impact of the rediscovery of poverty in the 1880s helped to bring about a much more complex analysis of poverty and its causes , which in turn looked toward the State to begin to solve the problem .
13 This is reflected in the religion , which in turn serves as the model for traditional Hindu society .
14 His argument is that the penetration of capitalism into the countryside leads to the articulation of the capitalist mode with the subsistence economy , which in turn leads to the diversification of the village economy , with wage migration becoming an increasing part of rural life .
15 North Kaibab is a maintained trail which begins on a series of steep switchbacks , plunging down the side of Roaring Springs Canyon , a tributary of Bright Angel Canyon , which in turn leads to the Colorado .
16 It leads to a break-down in communication between people , which in turn leads to the loss of relationships .
17 Piaget argues that the ability to handle psychological content develops before the ability to handle physical content , which in turn develops before the ability to handle logical content .
18 He referred the matter to the UN which in turn complained to the FAO .
19 The new districts were very largely based on amalgamations of existing district authorities which in turn derived from the sanitary districts created in the mid-nineteenth century .
20 The Beveridge Report , which formed the basis of much of the post-war social security legislation , contained certain features which in part led to the need to reform the pension system .
21 So there was some basis for supposing that the appellants had been informed in writing , that their obligation was only not to sell the property , rather than the wider terms which in fact applied to the injunction .
22 It is a long established rule of law that where a contracting party refuses to perform his contractual obligations by giving a wrong reason , this does not subsequently deprive him of a justification which in fact existed at the time of refusal ( see Taylor v Oakes ( 1922 ) 27 Com Cas 261 ; Braithwaite v Foreign Hardwood Co Ltd [ 1905 ] 2 KB 543 ; and Fercometal SARL v Mediterranean Shipping Co SA [ 1989 ] AC 788 discussed in Chapter 15 ) .
23 It rejects the theoretical approach which claims University but which in fact consists of the interplay , in a closed system , of motives of atomistic , undifferentiated , instantly-adjusting ‘ agents ’ .
24 In Gledhow Autoparts Ltd v Delaney [ 1965 ] 1 WLR 1366 Diplock LJ said " It is natural … to tend to look at what in fact happened under the agreement ; but the question of the validity of a covenant in restraint of trade has to be determined at the date at which the agreement was entered into and has to be determined in the light of what may happen under the agreement , although what may happen may be and always is different in some respects from what did happen .
25 This was what in fact occurred in the leading Australian case of Mason v. New South Wales , 102 C.L.R. 108 .
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