Example sentences of "[Wh det] [pron] can [verb] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Our gentle driving had resulted in 15.6mpg — about what I was expecting — but also a maximum touring range of 300 miles , which I can imagine some owners quibbling with .
2 In Men 's rooms , which are the only ones from which I can report personal experiences , there are elaborate rituals for avoiding the impression of suspect motives .
3 Such an object is not so very different from a table or a cow , concerning which I can have similar information of where they are and what they are doing .
4 In every question needing assessment a standard or scale of reference is required by which you can measure relative success , failure or achievement .
5 This is a strip fixed with points on to which you can attach any number of bulbs that you like .
6 For a programme in which you can devote six hours a day to language learning , Brewster and Brewster suggest the following amounts of time on each phrase : In your daily programme you may experience two reactions — boredom or frustration .
7 He 's got a pair of shearing scissors and he 's been doing like , this boy 's African , so he 's got , you know , Afro hair , which you can do curly-wurly signs on the back of him , it looks pretty neat .
8 There are two ways in which you can achieve this look .
9 Early in the Autumn Term there is a reception at which you can meet current staff and students .
10 There is an integral garage from which you can gain direct access to the cellar .
11 At the end of each evening there will a special prize draw in which you can win Good Food Club annual memberships , cheeseboards , Zanussi cool bags and storage containers and Tupperware cheese graters .
12 These include a heated swimming pool , sauna and solarium , crazy golf , Exmoor club in which you can enjoy free entertainment , a shop and ‘ Country Kitchen ’ restaurant , launderette , good bar food and take away meals .
13 ( A supplementary pension payable under the Supplementary Benefits scheme is not taxable , nor are voluntary payments made to her by you or other relatives , for which you can claim tax-free allowance .
14 Camp on one hole one day , or in an area from which you can see several holes .
15 Macbeth , short and severely to the point , is not a play onto which you can get much spin , but what we are given here is a treatment devoid of ambiguity .
16 £50000 does not go very far in TV , except on one or two small regional stations ; it is quite difficult , as the cigarette companies find , to spend £1 million plus on a brand without using TV at all : if you only have a few hundred pounds to spend there are few press media in which you can consider full pages or even moderately large sizes .
17 But what catches the eye , while lane-changing to avoid the gaudily clad in day-glo outfits , is the ease with which you can buy boron-graphite shafts at just 13 dollars a go .
18 Given information represents the common ground between speaker and hearer and gives the latter a reference point to which s/he can relate new information .
19 The differences between disciplines to which Taylor refers mean that the discussion will to some extent be an abstract one , moving at a level at which one can identify general ideas , characteristics and trends .
20 One makes one 's reputation , and one 's reputation enables one to achieve the conditions in which one can do good work . ’
21 The record in a profile can contain inputs spanning more than a hundred years , and under favourable circumstances it can be used to chart oscillations in recharge , from which one can infer climatic history .
22 Because trying to meet this criterion has occupied so much of my research time in the past two decades it is worth spelling out again that to adopt a reductionist methodology in research strategy — that is , to try to stabilize the world that one is studying by manipulating one variable at a time , holding everything else as constant as possible — is generally the only way to do experiments from which one can draw clear conclusions .
23 As with the stereotypes we refer to in the business of everyday life , we know they are not , and can not be , comprehensively true or correct , but they provide us with an indispensable framework within which we can interpret particular instances .
24 That 's good news in itself , but it 's also good in that it provides a bedrock on which we can build sustainable recovery of output and and job creation .
25 They are the first published documents from which we can glean personal details about ordinary older people in significant numbers .
26 Well , we 've been going for , I should think , about eighteen months in hospitals in Oxford , looking at ways in which we can give better information to consultants to help them to be more in charge of their own destiny .
27 I will be exploring with my senior colleagues ways in which we can give direct help in addition to advice . ’
28 There are a number of ways in which we can link Weberian theory to our particular interests .
29 We observe that , in addition to the given matrices C and B , ( 2 ) contains 2n + 1 other quantities , viz. λ , x , and F. Since we have n equations , we can determine any n of these quantities in terms of the remaining n + 1 , to which we can ascribe arbitrary values .
30 Not only will the proposed reorganisation plunge local government into confusion and uncertainty for a number of years , during which we can expect little progress with the review and upgrading of old minerals permissions , but the resulting structure of small unitary authorities is very unlikely to deliver either the resources or the strategic perspective required to implement the proposed review .
  Next page