Example sentences of "which [modal v] [verb] to [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 In my view the dock company is not entitled to any statutory immunities which may attach to the port authority .
2 The study will also take into account the effects of aging , which may contribute to a decline in knowledge retention over a long period .
3 As in previous studies dual disease , which may contribute to the anaemia , was found in 20% of cases .
4 Also , the binding of gp120 or gp120-antibody complexes to CD4 has been shown to interfere with antigen-specific activation of CD4 cells and trigger programmed cell death in vitro , which may contribute to the pathogenesis of HIV infection ( including immune function deterioration and decline of CD4 T lymphocytes ) .
5 Women who take the contraceptive pill and who also smoke cigarettes are more likely to have a coronary attack , stroke or blood clot in the leg veins , which may shift to the lung ( pulmonary embolism ) than non-smokers who are on the pill .
6 Osred was slain in 716 ‘ to the south of the border' ( ASC D , s.a. 716 ) , which may refer to a boundary with the Picts .
7 A slightly different type of case is illustrated by the French feminine noun la sentinelle ( the guard ) , which usually refers to a man , and the masculine noun le ministre ( minister in the government ) , which may refer to a woman .
8 vi ) Outputs which may lead to a purchase decision .
9 Once again , something should be done to remove the ugly spectacle of a Government department negotiating a compromise settlement that saves work all round , but which may lead to a claim by another department .
10 The ten l.e.d.s concerned here are placed at various positions in the ‘ field ’ , each representing a number of runs or a no-score , plus a couple which may lead to a catch or an appeal for lbw .
11 A fourth and very important influence on the rate of recorded crime is the effect of changes in the law , which may lead to an alteration in the definition of what is or is not a crime .
12 A cause of action to which a hospital authority or a member of its medical staff ( or both ) may be liable as the result of the performance of an operation is trespass to the person , and treatment administered without the patient 's express or implied consent constitutes an assault which may lead to an action for damages .
13 When an enquiry has been received which may lead to an export contract , what options are available for securing payment from the overseas buyer ?
14 This is an extremely valuable marker of significant biliary obstruction , which may lead to the development of hepatic damage and secondary biliary cirrhosis .
15 It sounds like an organisation worth buying a raffle ticket to support though not instead of a card for your beloved , an omission which may lead to the seeking out of a CMAC counsellor .
16 Other countries , such as Pakistan , allow uncontrolled exploitation which may lead to the extinction of many wild plants .
17 More positively , Article 100A(4) may be seen as the price to be paid for the acceptance of a system of decision-making which may lead to the enactment of Community legislation in areas still subject to national measures .
18 It is also justifiable , however , for the criminal law to penalise conduct which may lead to the causing of physical harm , particularly in situations where the conduct has little social utility or where the risk is well known .
19 This has the advantage of involving pupils in oral history work , which may lead to the loan of photographs , documents or artefacts .
20 It is not simply the information brought to the fore during the session itself which is significant , but also anything which may come to the patient 's mind between the end of that consultation and the beginning of the next .
21 An example of such a clause which may amount to a restriction is the obligation not to enter into any contract for the acquisition or the sale of goods outside the normal course of business .
22 There is , in general , no consensus on the standards which should apply to the granting of such degrees , the course contents , or the proportion of taught course content relative to research content .
23 It would rather mount a protest over student grants ( probably in the UK the most generous in the world per student ) than attempt to frame a Charter of the academic rights which should fall to every student .
24 There were no lights in evidence , except for a slight glow from the top of a short flight of steps , which must lead to a room above the garage .
25 Ho responded immediately to this newspaper article by proposing various measures which might lead to a return to normality and to the hopeful provisions of the modus vivendi , not least an end to the press and radio incitements from both sides , but whether at this stage Ho and Blum were in the saddle or not , things were beginning to fall apart .
26 Battle and a whole belt of Wealden parishes produced no response at all ; since the data were collected by the local parish clergy , the low level of response is hardly surprising , farmers as a rule having a dim view of requests for information which might lead to a rise in taxes or tithes .
27 It also takes up a lot of memory for OPEN , remembering all states which might lead to a solution .
28 The Divisional Court in that case distinguished between the obtaining of evidence for use in a trial , ‘ direct ’ material , which constituted ‘ testimony ’ under that Act and which would be gathered in response to a Letter of Request , and the obtaining of ‘ indirect ’ material , which might lead to a line of enquiry pointing to actual evidence ; the English courts would not assist a foreign court to obtain such ‘ indirect ’ material .
29 Her response was to revive the tactics of earlier campaigns with chevauchées which might lead to the capture of strongpoints in northern France and put pressure on Paris itself .
30 It 's tempting to scent conspiracy — did Hoover stall investigations which might lead to the Mob , who held those compromising pictures ? — but there 's no need .
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