Example sentences of "which [pers pn] [vb past] [prep] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ My GP prescribed an oral antibiotic which I took for five months , but it did n't do anything .
2 I was able to realize this desire agreeably by means of a small scholarly society which I formed with two friends . "
3 This book is about Britain 's Defence policy in her post-imperial era , and is the sequel to my Withdrawal from Empire , published in 1986 , in which I looked through military eyes at the creation , development and eventual transformation of the Empire into the loosely-knit British Commonwealth .
4 and placed his resignation in my hands , which I accepted with great regret .
5 But I soon learnt how to bake little cakes made of corn , which I ate with warm milk .
6 The bedding which I observed at first hand in 1954 in the peasant community of Pul Eliya was nothing like as grand as the stereotype ; but , apart from some minor differences , it had all the same elements and for the most part they occurred in just the same sequence .
7 However I do not recall hearing of any problem every being experienced by low-flying military hardware or cruise-level GA over Madley Earth Station which I managed for several years prior to my retirement last year , and which I believe is a much larger facility than Oakhanger .
8 The European arts festival , which I announced on 9 December will be a rewarding and imaginative way of celebrating our Presidency of the European Community in the second half of the year .
9 And one of the differences that anorexia can become much more visible and identifiable , whereas those of us who have experienced bulimia , which I had for thirteen years , can be extremely secret and well disguised because we normally do n't change from normal body weight .
10 An American film was showing which I recognized as Double Indemnity .
11 I soon felt hungry and thirsty , and my first food was fruit which I found on some trees near a river .
12 Two members of the W.A.A.F. posted to Station X neatly encapsulated the idiosyncratic nature of Bletchley Park and its denizens in these verses , which I found with great pleasure in Beryl Escott 's recent Women in Air Force Blue :
13 I was also gratified by the immense good will and friendship towards Britain which I encountered on all sides .
14 Also asked him for report which I needed for Statutory Review .
15 The national and local results of the tests of seven-year-olds which I published on 19 December give , for the first time , a clear picture of how our seven-year-olds are performing .
16 At the time tomato purée for the restaurant was preserved in champagne bottles which were then sterilised — a method which was demonstrated to me by the cook at a pensione in Anacapri where I stayed during the summer of 1952 , and which I described in Italian Food .
17 Mrs Di Billups was head of Broughton Junior School , South Humberside , which I visited with great pleasure and profit in the summer of 1988 .
18 As someone bereaved through the disease , I felt angry and upset by the flippancy with which you dealt with this subject .
19 Well a ponch er it 's sort of made of wood , and got a got a handle crosswise which you held in one half of it in each hand , it had a stem , and on the on the ponch itself was a sort of er piece of wood that had been er cut out to have about four , I think it was four , legs on this , you see and you used to stand over the ponch and
20 So if there 's anything , there 's a slightly different approach to it , and one thing that we are being urged to do , through the very way in which you mentioned in another context , is to make sure that facilities are appropriate locally , and developing policies within that .
21 The housekeeper brought in the coffee in an ornate silver tray which she deposited on one level of the Scandinavian wall-system .
22 ‘ Ingested that from which she died at that meal ? ’
23 Robyn , doing her best to ignore the almost overwhelming feeling of pure dislike which she had for this man , glanced at the ornate carriage clock beside the bed , registered the time slowly and looked aghast .
24 The goddess Hathor is thus given an uncharacteristic fierce role , but one which she fulfilled with great zeal .
25 Lesley turned smartly left as the lights changed , and wound her way by back-streets to the parking-ground on the edge of the shopping centre , a multi-storey monstrosity of raw concrete , at which she gazed with resigned distaste as she crept slowly up to the barrier and drove in to the second tier .
26 One leaned forward , his face almost touching hers , and made some comment to which she responded with another shriek of mirth .
27 Her first pamphlet , Strange and Wonderful Newes from Whitehall ( 1654 ) , chronicles the twelve-day trance into which she fell on 7 January 1654 , when she went with Vavasor Powell [ q.v. ] to Whitehall , where he was questioned for subversive preaching .
28 She attended an excellent direct-grant grammar school ( which has since gone independent , much to Robyn 's disgust ) where she was Head Girl and Captain of Games and which she left with four A grades at A-Level .
29 He gave her chips which she ate with great deliberation .
30 A country that gave her a cold welcome , in which the To Let signs specified ‘ No Coloureds ’ , and of which she wrote in Second-Class Citizen , ‘ If I had been Jesus I would have passed England by and not dropped a single blessing . ’
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