Example sentences of "[noun pl] which [verb] up [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 A further aspect of the new system , which has yet to be fully exploited by centres , is that the Higher National Units which make up the new courses can be taken individually by candidates , rather than in complete courses .
2 Not only might such a diagram act as a checklist of the types of land use to look for in a study of any area , but it may also serve to prompt questions about the working of the basic agricultural economic units which make up the English landscape .
3 This makes it difficult to place students in ‘ responsible line management roles which make up a valuable part of their training as chartered accountants in business ’ .
4 It can be useful practice to read through the first sentences of paragraphs which make up a published essay , to see how much work — of summary and of signposting — is being done by these " topic sentences " .
5 This is illustrated in the notes which make up a musical tune .
6 It is with understanding linguistic factors in relation to the concrete problems and activities which make up the daily reality of the school : what children need to learn , how they learn and what difficulties they experience .
7 There is a very clear , clean cut approach to the whole collection with the accent on strong graphics and sports oriented motifs to create renewed interest in the ‘ contemporary classic ’ shapes of the shirts , shorts , tops , sweaters , track suits , joggers and shell suits which make up the whole range .
8 Grammatical rules are seen as existing independently of the child , and changes in the child 's language in the direction of conventional syntax and morphology are seen as indicative of the child acquiring the rules which make up the grammatical system .
9 The ingredients which make up the special stew are a closely kept secret and vary from chef to chef .
10 It was almost concealed by the small columns which held up the campanile roof , merely a shinier darkness in the dark .
11 Microsoft 's latest scheme to increase its market share in the Macintosh software arena is a trade-in deal which nets a customer the four Microsoft applications which make up the integrated Microsoft Office pack for less than the price of just one of those applications .
12 Instead of seeking to have what little impact they can , they come to feel completely surrounded by impasses which seal up the potential gaps between the proliferating demands .
13 Though delighting to read in Blackwood 's of the exploits of imperial heroes , the educated British public showed little personal inclination for service in the assorted white men 's graves which made up the tropical dependencies .
14 One can forget for a while the rigours faced everyday and appreciate wholeheartedly the kind of escapism that lies at the root of ‘ The Passionate Shepherd to his love ’ and ‘ The Garden ’ and all other poems which make up the pastoral garden .
15 The Charters agreed by the Allied Powers which set up the International Military Tribunals at Nuremberg and Tokyo and the judgments of those Tribunals made it clear that everyone , from the lowest private soldier to the highest general and statesman is required to comply with the humanitarian spirit and the generally accepted principles of the laws of war .
16 More important , the big volcanoes which make up the Hawaiian Islands all seem at first sight to have central vents — they are mountains thousands of metres high , with craters right at the top .
17 This project seeks to explain and assess the institutions and organisational structures which make up the government-industry ‘ policy community ’ on an internationally comparative basis .
18 The primary , but not exclusive , focus is on Scottish IT firms which make up a localised sample that could be comprehensively surveyed .
19 These trends and interrelationships can be illustrated most effectively by reference to the zone level of the Functional Regions framework , particularly the contrast between the Cores and Rings which make up the Daily Urban Systems of the 228 Functional Regions in Britain .
20 In system jargon , the working world is one sub-system within a complete set of sub-systems which make up the total environment or life space of the individual .
21 On Monday morning we were greeted by the view of Bequia , one of 32 islands which make up the wonderful Grenadines .
22 Anthropological textbooks , along with the arrangement of the university syllabus , usually give the impression that an alien way of life can always be analysed according to a more or less standard set of chapter headings which divide up the total field into sub-sections denoted by the English language words : economics , kinship , politics , law , religion , magic , myth , ritual .
23 This can not be done by restricting attention to its formal properties , the relations and regularities which make up the internal mechanism of the device .
24 Two of many examples of nomic correlates , although the matter is in several ways complex , are provided by the interdependent variation of the pressure of a gas and its volume and temperature , according to the Boyle-Charles law for ideal gases , and the orbits of the two stars which make up a double star , which are held close together by mutual gravitational attraction .
25 Several versions of BASIC have automatic " garbage collection " routines which tidy up the variable memory space when this occurs .
26 It was this group of active questioners which made up the hard core of the evangelists who spread the new Christian teachings or ‘ Gospel ’ to many parts of the northern hemisphere .
27 To the extent that the government , the major issuer of those assets which make up the private sector 's net worth , does not alter its spending and taxation policies in response to a rising real value of its outstanding liabilities , aggregate spending will rise as the price level falls .
28 There seem also to be other compositional differences , such as in the silicates which make up the greater part of both planets .
29 PA chief executive Clive Bradley warned the a.g.m. that agreement between American and British publishers which divide up the Continental European market between different suppliers ( typically , particularly in relation to works of fiction , when British publishers enter into rights agreements with American publishers , the British publisher obtains exclusive rights for the UK and Ireland , the American publisher secures exclusive rights for the United States , and they both have open market or non-exclusive rights for Continental Europe ) could leave British publishers vulnerable to the importation of American books .
30 Both were compatible with the republican-radical ideals which made up the official ideology of the Third Republic and which in 1880 meant in the main a deep distrust of Russia , the oppressor of the Poles .
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