Example sentences of "which we have [vb pp] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 The draft of the city wide local plan will be going to the city council in December , and prove of the consultation , but the figures some of you 've seen in our evidence have been a agreed by the the local plan steering group , who sit in council members er across party , committee which has agreed the basic numbers , so the draft allocations which are in our submission , and which we have seen in the schedules yesterday , are accepted as a basis for consultation by the city council but are clearly subject to review .
2 This book focuses upon 1985 , a mid-way point in the Thatcher years , but places it in the context of the changing reporting which we have studied in the years 1951 , 1961 , 1971 , 1978 as well as 1985 .
3 Lord Donaldson said that he could now break the traditional silence of judges about their colleagues and ‘ give voice to the anger and disgust which we have felt at the campaign of calumny waged against you in recent months ’ .
4 In fact it is not — it is a gloss which we have imposed on the accounts and stories they have provided .
5 The legislative plans that I have announced today are designed to consolidate and build on the improvement in industrial relations which we have achieved over the last 12 years .
6 Such a myth is integral to the salient cultural paradigm of our times and which we have possessed for the last three centuries .
7 For the reasons we have endeavoured to state , we give our opinion on this matter that as to the question of law raised by the Attorney-General , which we have cited at the beginning of this judgment , the answer is ‘ No . ’
8 There is no better example of the logical and ideological confusions into which we have fallen over the charging issue than in pre-school provision .
9 Viewed in this light hard look appears as a movement away from the earlier ‘ kid glove ’ approach of the American courts to the tougher standard which we have had in the United Kingdom for over 100 years .
10 And er the result of all of that has been that the current development programme scheduled which we have supplied to the committee is probably about as fast as the programme is capable of running .
11 Secondly the deliveries of the equipment from the equipment suppliers who had been selected er generally fell behind the promises which they had made , so the main reason for the technical delays has been lack of equipment of the correct standard to proceed with the integration programme erm the erm the problems which beset the programme in nineteen ninety two after the German minister started questioning its future clearly had a direct bearing on that because many of the equipment suppliers , particularly those in Germany , suddenly began to think hey this programme is not going anywhere , why should we invest a lot of effort and and money into it and they slowed down so that has had a knock on effect in in terms of delaying the total programme and erm the result of all of that has been that the current development programme schedule which we have supplied to the committee is probably about as fast as the programme is capable of running .
12 The kinds of stages which we have found in the work of Marx and Engels seem now to most anthropologists much too moulded to European history , even taking into account the modifications which , as we saw , were gradually incorporated in their work to handle their growing knowledge of non-European societies .
13 Since the 1972 Act , there have been many additional authorities to Brussels through European Court judgments , individual directives and the implications and effects of the Single European Act , quite apart from the effect of the treaties which we have agreed in the past two days but which have yet to be ratified by Parliament .
14 The increased qualified majority voting in the Council of Ministers , to which we have agreed in the treaty , means that we must have a way of keeping our national Parliaments better informed than they are at present .
15 The other meaning uses plastered in the type of structure which we have introduced in the present section ; notice that it allows addition of to be ( and that it is parallel in its overall structure to ( 42 ) where there is a non-finite clause complete with subject , verb and object ) : ( 41 ) Clara wants the façade to be plastered ( 42 ) she wants the builders to plaster the façade Let us also take note of a subtle and rather interesting ambiguity , found in : ( 43 ) Oliver imagined her red-haired This may mean that Oliver is allowing himself to speculate on the effect of , let us say , adding a wig to a blonde lady of his acquaintance ( and this may therefore be called the " cosmetic " version ) ; or he may be trying to build a mental picture of someone he has never met ( the " unacquainted " version ) , in which case imagined could be replaced by supposed with very little alteration in the meaning of the whole .
16 It is worth noting , however , that Richards 's concept of poetry is similar to that which we have encountered in the previous two chapters , in that poetry for him is simply shorthand for literature that has aesthetic value ; his belief was that the value of literature as a whole lay entirely in its use of the emotive function of language .
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