Example sentences of "[Wh det] we [vb mod] [verb] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 In summary , one can say that one can not teach any creature to mentally be like any other , since we have no handle by which we may modify the essential mind structure of another creature .
2 Compare what we take to be the true causal circumstance for last night , which we may label the solar conditions .
3 What do we believe of the connections between such a set , which we may call a causal circumstance , and the effect ?
4 Style is a relational term : we talk about " the style of x " , referring through " style " to characteristics of language use , and correlating these with some extralinguistic x , which we may call the stylistic DOMAIN .
5 Entities , being elements of a specifically linguistic domain which we shall call the intensional level , may or may not have a referent in some real or imaginary external world ; we can certainly talk about an entity while uncertain of the existence of any related " thing " in the world about which we are speaking , or even while explicitly rejecting such an existence .
6 At our last meeting it was decided to make the meeting on November 10th , an extended on in which we would consider the distinctive role of Christian Aid Scotland within the national structures .
7 The next possible commemorative year on which we might hang an Open Day and other celebrations would appear to be 1999 , marking 300 years since the Royal Charter was granted to James Sutherland ( 12 January , 1699 ) .
8 On the one hand , there has been the approach which emphasizes the complexity of financial accounting and thus produces many user groups ( which we might call the differential approach ) ; alternatively , there has been the approach which emphasizes the commonalities and produces few user groups ( which we might call the integral approach ) .
9 On the one hand , there has been the approach which emphasizes the complexity of financial accounting and thus produces many user groups ( which we might call the differential approach ) ; alternatively , there has been the approach which emphasizes the commonalities and produces few user groups ( which we might call the integral approach ) .
10 It said the code represented a ‘ foundation for good practice and ethical conduct … on which we can build the growing reputation of the industry ’ .
11 The problem amounts to isolating criteria according to which we can identify an aggressive act .
12 There is enormous value in having a body of Renaissance texts which we can assume a large number of readers have some acquaintance with .
13 The first , labelled urban managerialism , focuses on the activities of councillors , officers and pressures groups ; the second , labelled urban politics , focuses on the politics of consumption and , in one version at least , identifies a dual state in which the local state is principally concerned with consumption issues ; the third , which we can label the social relations approach , stresses the importance of locality and uneven development as the basis for local politics .
14 This is one clear way in which we can recognise the clear distinction between the form of human personality and the form of divine personality .
15 Here , then , is the second way in which we can connect the Marxist or political economy perspectives on urban sociology to our particular interest in human nature .
16 We first consider a very simple computer , with which we can introduce the basic concepts and terminology required for the remainder of the book .
17 At the beginning of this chapter it was suggested that the main features by which we can characterise the wider category of positivist criminology ( and which also serve to distinguish it from classical criminology ) are determinism , differentiation , pathology and the diversion of attention away from crime ( and the criminal law ) to the criminal .
18 Scene six is , as I have already suggested , the pivotal scene for Anderson — the point from which we can see a considerable change wrought in his character .
19 Thus , for example , Salaman ( 1979 , p.61 ) has defined structure as ‘ the way in which work is organised and control exercised ’ , a definition in which we can see the twofold emphasis on relationships of communication and authority .
20 So we can distinguish then a third state in w which we can call an inactivated state and which will leave the channel closed , but also unable to respond as it would be able to do if it resided in a simple closed in a simple closed state which were responsive to gating .
21 We try to bring about an environment in which creativity can flourish by selecting people of outstanding ability who wish to work on a problem of their own choice and for which we can imagine a substantial outcome .
22 It does nothing to promote an honest public debate , in which we could examine a wide range of factors — including the present uses and abuses of VAT by the Government and many others — and then arrive at some morally-decent decision .
23 Positioning ourselves just inside the sheltering arm , outside which we could see an alarming amount of white water , we awaited his signal .
24 We found a way in which we could help the black community directly and in the most positive way with considerable sums .
25 These women go out with their children and in their bags or baskets , instead of carrying nappies or extra clothing for their children , they have the bombs or weapons which we will use a few blocks further on .
26 John Titford was never what we would call a leading light at Badcox Lane Chapel — he seems to have been reliable , but perhaps not dynamic .
27 It 's the , it 's the what we would call the walking-out uniform , you know the , the undressed uniform , not the fire fighting uniform , which is really just a jacket and trousers and shirt and tie and , and the girls have a skirt and er er a tie and blouse and that sort of thing , so and a cap of course .
28 Now if we can go back to the period when the eighty odd agreements was developed into one national agreement , it seemed to break up what we would term a big happy family .
29 Finally , it is worth pointing out that , if my account of neoteny in man is correct , even the relatively ego-less citizen of the totalitarian state is the possessor of what we might term the neurophysiological substrate of the ego and the superego , which almost certainly comprises some of the most recently acquired elements of the human brain .
30 This is to recapitulate briefly what we might term the cultural , as opposed to the natural , history of the ego and the superego .
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