Example sentences of "which [pron] [vb -s] [prep] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 She will also receive a £2.2 million advance for every film in which she acts plus another Pounds 500,000 for each one she produces .
2 This meant she could continue to level her basilisk stare ( the one which she reserves for special enemies ) at selected MPs .
3 They provide an intermediate level of reasons to which one appeals in normal cases where a need for a decision arises .
4 I mention this only because it is one of the dominant features in an inspector 's life , the shadow of which he feels at all times .
5 Gironella 's subject matter is the acclaimed artistic masterpieces of the Spanish past which he reworks in various ways , most dramatically into ironic altars assembled from a variety of painted , sculpted and ready-made elements ( Fig. 1 ) .
6 The ease with which he passes from provincial gaucheries to suave Franco-Italianate portraiture , which made him painter to King George III , is fully recorded .
7 Stories for de Man are , like Rousseau 's parable and Proust 's image , metalingual allegories , and this accounts for the ease with which he passes from specific examples to general rules about language .
8 Of the covenants by the tenant running with the land that " to pay rent or taxes " and " not to assign or underlet , " and by the landlord running with the reversion , " to renew the lease " are the most apposite of the instances which he quotes from decided cases .
9 But he keeps on spending as much as before , topping up his spending account with cash from the piggy-bank , which he replaces with little bits of paper saying that the spending account owes the piggy-bank money .
10 Engels here , as elsewhere , is clearly influenced by the romantic nationalist tradition of nineteenth-century historians , and the praise which he lavishes on these groups , as well as the labelling of them as ‘ German ’ , is probably misplaces .
11 The lawyer advocates formal legal propositions which he supports with reasoned arguments .
12 From which he accounts for 2 pipes of wine bought at Canterbury from Preston , 1 pipe at London , 1 tun at Canterbury by J. Boteler , 3 tuns at Sandwicum , 1 other tun at Canterbury and for the carriage of the same , £41 12s.2d .
13 His article is particularly valuable for the evidence which he adduces from contemporary documents , some of which is of considerable importance in helping to determine the facts of Molla Fenari 's life ; but much of what he says is , as will be shown , based on so little genuine historical evidence ( insofar as this can be judged from the sources he quotes ) and appears so speculative that it must be treated with some caution .
14 One is a rickshaw , which he hires for four rupees a day .
15 This is part of what makes his eventual faith in God ( which he reaches for other reasons ) a radical reliance on God alone .
16 Which it does for several years .
17 The respect in which it lags behind competing products — recent versions of 1-2-3 and Quattro Pro — is in its printing and presentation facilities — often referred to as ‘ spreadsheet publishing ’ .
18 This is especially the case with the liberal democratic form of the state whose claim to legitimacy rests on the access to the political system which it grants to non-dominant interests .
19 At the next level of analysis , every object may usually be organized into a given field within which it contrasts with all others , for example the various types of curtain , canoe , car or ornament .
20 Land acquisition , site assembly , land reclamation , infrastructural improvement and environmental enhancement are the means through which it engages with local authorities , the Department of Environment and most importantly , the private sector to lever investment that will lead to economic growth .
21 As in the Fall narrative , which it resembles in more ways than one , there seems to be no going back ; our original innocence , the wholeness of an original bisexuality , is never retrievable .
22 Marxism 's claim to the status of a science proper thus functions as a device to avoid the historicity through which it accounts for other phenomena .
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