Example sentences of "which [pers pn] [vb mod] [adv] [verb] to " in BNC.

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1 But this is still a reading of great insight which I shall often return to , for it offers much food for thought .
2 If you have a message which I may properly convey to her , I will do so .
3 my Lord another factual situation which I 'll simply referred to is the er on going debate in European commission or cases relating to up stream fuel , er , where there 's very little trade , erm for technical reasons because of the isolation of the United Kingdom , however the commission has searched jurisdiction over restricted competition in the market because the fuels have a direct impact upon product , erm from production costs , product down stream of which there is trade
4 Because the European Commission is making a number of funds available to develop those links , the overture fund , the knowhow fund funded by the Foreign Office , the fund , the enterprise fund , the fur fund , the tempest fund , all these are in the reportback which I 'll gratefully give to the press and also the opposition if they 'll bother to read it .
5 As you climb by the road , you see a ring of mountains to your right which you might easily take to be the Cirque de Troumouse , but this is in fact yet a third cirque , that of Estaubé , intermediate between Gavarnie and Troumouse , imposing in its own right if too withdrawn properly to enclose you , as a good cirque should .
6 Here are some examples , which you can easily add to :
7 He could imagine the words in which she would later report to her husband .
8 The police have n't been able to trace her and we shall have to arrange an inquest — and of course the funeral , which she will naturally need to be concerned with . ’
9 We could on this basis begin to question the lives of many people which we would subjectively consider to be less fulfilling than our own .
10 In sense-perception we have a conscious awareness of material things around us , such as trees and stones , things which we can later represent to ourselves in memory and imagination .
11 The broad feature , which we can loosely refer to as a quasi-periodic oscillation ( QPO ) can not be seen directly in the light curve , because many cycles need to be averaged to overcome Poisson noise .
12 By so doing we start to produce accounts of what needs changing if the oppression of disabled people is to be overcome , we start to develop a disabled perspective which we can progressively apply to all aspects of society .
13 Another ordinance allowed a magistrate to try summarily cases which he would normally commit to the district court , if he himself was also the district judge .
14 The Duke turned Friar in Measure for Measure cultivates at least two different prose-styles , a plain and business-like one for his benevolent deceptions , and that of a moralist disappointed with the world — a persona within which he can also rise to more serious denunciatory verse as the occasion warrants ( for verse within this prose role see III.ii. 19–39 ; 261–82 ; IV.ii. 108–13 ) .
15 If she did , he would know at once that there were certain ways in which he could still get to her .
16 Oliver had his own ideas on this , which he could hardly put to Mrs Figgis-Hewett ; they involved her dramatic appearance before the dinner began when he had worked out she could have added something to Sir Thomas 's drink in the confusion .
17 The question of homage , on the contrary , was another matter : its significance lay not in the amount of service which it might subsequently furnish to the kings of France , but in the principle which it enshrined .
18 Even if there was personal participation by all the citizens in the making of decisions and policies , the only situation in which it would even appear to be clear what was the will of the people would be a unanimous decision .
19 If an issue of a government security is under-subscribed the Issue Department will purchase the remainder , which it will gradually sell to the public .
20 By criticizing the Conservative Party mid-term the right-wing press can build up a certain degree of credibility with its readers which it can then use to maximum effect by suspending criticism of the Conservative Party and increasing its attacks on Labour as the election approaches .
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