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

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1 Braque enjoyed his first success only in 1907 , when the German dealer Wilhelm Uhde bought the Fauve pictures which he exhibited at the Salon des Indépendants .
2 But the political solutions which he advocated in the 1930s were not so .
3 But the books which he took from the shelves in those stolen hours in the school library were history and biography and political science .
4 Almost the only incident to mar the near perfection of the period immediately surrounding his retirement was the absence of any reply to a somewhat sententious letter of reminiscence and good wishes which he sent to the Duke of Windsor ( as King Edward had become ) .
5 An individual is a member of a community from which he obtains considerable benefits , in return he develops special skills which he applies for the benefit of the community .
6 Erm , many of you will also have seen Jean-Claude at previous meetings which he attended in the capacity as to Michel .
7 Panels lit up and he reached for a number of X-ray plates which he attached to the luminescent plastic .
8 Today , 30 years after his death , Lewis is remembered more as the author of such enchanting children 's stories as The Lion , the Witch and the Wardrobe than as a writer and broadcaster on ethical and religious questions , but it is one of those BBC sermons which he delivers at the beginning of this play .
9 But Mancini is here guilty of reading back into Edward IV 's reign the tensions which he observed after the king 's death .
10 But Mancini is here guilty of reading back into Edward IV 's reign the tensions which he observed after the king 's death .
11 But he envied more the great herring gulls and black-headed gulls which he watched through the bars of his cage as they soared on the summery winds , the white and grey of their feathers caught brightly by the sun as they banked into a turn .
12 This novel becomes ‘ readable ’ if we accept the psychologizing interpretation that Wallas is a kind of victim of Oedipal obsessions which he projects onto the objects around him .
13 Similarly the texts which he introduced into the Canterbury library are soon also found at Durham , Rochester , Exeter , and in other English libraries .
14 Underhill stopped in front of a lock-up on Dale Street , opened the door and then began carrying out large cardboard cartons which he placed on the hand-cart …
15 In the rear of one of these biplanes there was a gunner with a Scarfe ring who selected a pan of rounds which he put on the gun .
16 There he entered a museum which had no antiquities , and in the course of several years built galleries to house two private collections which he brought to the museum .
17 Dwelly in fact lists many of the plant names in Cameron , on occasion presenting corrected forms of them , but also draws on other sources which he cites at the front of his dictionary .
18 Now sixty years old , failing in health , and without papal backing , Winchelsey was unlikely to present the new king with the problems which he offered to the old one , but he did not hesitate to support the barons against Gaveston .
19 Marx fancied that he could simply take over the Hegelian analysis and , in Engels ' famous phrase , ‘ stand Hegel the right way up ’ with no reference to the fact that Hegel 's whole analysis is rooted in an effort to resolve quite specific problems which he inherited in the theory of knowledge .
20 His company , National Airways which he ran in the early 1980s provided great adventure too .
21 The lengthy obituaries which he earned in the British press deserve to completed now by the publication as soon as possible of his memoirs , on which he was working to the last .
22 Is Mr Careless criminally liable for the representations which he made in the brochure ?
23 Baden-Powell was particularly fond of this extravagant , but nevertheless deeply felt historical posture , and he saw the shadow of Rome hanging over the huge crowds attending the football stadiums which he likened to the ‘ unmanly ’ attitude of the young Romans who loafed around the circus entertainments — ‘ they paid men to play their games for them , so that they could look on without the fag of playing , just as we are doing in football now ’ — as he charged into battle against this betrayal of the British traditions of ‘ fair play ’ and sportsmanship :
24 Yet while his wife slept one afternoon he found himself looking in cardboard boxes in the attic for blackout curtains which he remembered from the War .
25 This figure of the diaspora returns us to one of the most important aspects of Levinas ' formulation of the relation of the ethical to the political , that is the connections which he makes between the structure of ontology and Eurocentrism , the latter ‘ disqualified ’ , as he puts it , ‘ by so many horrors ’ .
26 the individual … will fully capitalise the future tax payments where the debt is created , and he will write down the capital value of the income-earning assets which he owns by the present value of these future tax payments .
27 Baddam publicized in the Daily Advertiser the full range of experimental philosophy courses which he gave at the London Coffee House , Ludgate Hill , between 11 October 1732 and January 1733 , alternating with Abraham Chovet , a Huguenot anatomy lecturer who was appointed demonstrator to the Barber-Surgeons ' Company in 1734 .
28 The first crew removed the bodies of three of the airmen , but Raymond removed the body of the navigator , P/O McFarlane and took from him , his identity papers and personal papers which he concealed from the Germans and later passed to the French Resistance .
29 In the great Rougon-Macquart series of novels which he began during the Empire , Emile Zola misses no opportunity of denouncing the new Sodom , ‘ where pleasure is sold freely under the stars ’ .
30 Though Ismail Belig 's evidence is not perhaps the most reliable , the facts which he gives about the holders of the kadilik of Bursa in the period , facts which are at least consistent , if not necessarily accurate , indicate that Molla Yegan may indeed have left office a few years earlier than 844 : according to Ismail Belig , Yusuf Bali succeeded Molla Yegan in the kadilik in 842/1438–9 , himself being succeeded at the Sultan medrese by Molla Yegan 's son , Sah Mehmed ( or Mehmed Sah ) , who later also succeeded him as kadi in 846/1442–3 .
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