Example sentences of "which [vb base] up [art] [noun sg] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Like bony fish , they have lateral line organs which pick up the water movements made by prey .
2 the various formats which make up a style sheet- paragraph settings , margins and columns , page layouts , hyphernation and justification , widow and orphan control and automatic section numbering .
3 Reassembling , say , all the designs for all the parts which make up a jet engine can be a time-consuming task on a relational database .
4 To understand the nature of state power , it is necessary first of all to distinguish , and then to relate , the various elements which make up the state system .
5 The two hydrogen atoms and the one oxygen atom which make up the water molecule form strong covalent bonds ( Figure 7 , p.102 ) .
6 The islands which make up the East Indies archipelago form a region of fascinating complexity .
7 The suggested group contributions are shown in table 8.3 and the solubility parameter for a polymer can be estimated from the sum of the various molar attraction constants F for the groups which make up the repeat unit i.e.
8 In this case , it is the PACKAGE binary itself , not the source modules which make up the package binary , which is required .
9 About 15 miles south of Florence and 22 miles north of Siena , lies the Tavarnelle Val di Pesa , one of the nine boroughs which make up the Chianti Classico wine producing region .
10 The first drugs which could be relied on to reduce the dangerously high arterial pressure which precedes strokes and heart failure were substances which blocked the actions of acetylcholine at these ganglia , and so prevented the passage of nervous messages which put up the blood pressure .
11 The Chamber of Shipping , which set up a task force to review routing procedures , examined 15 coastal areas where existing routing agreements did not provide specific advice for tankers .
12 It was the quarrymen 's subscribed pennies which set up the University College of North Wales in Bangor at the turn of the century .
13 These events hastened moves towards a formal military alliance of the Western powers , and in April 1949 , 12 ( later 15 ) powers signed the North Atlantic Treaty , which set up the North Atlantic Treaty Organization ( NATO ) under which the signatories agreed that an attack on any one of them would lead to whatever action was deemed necessary , including the " use of armed force " ( CORE , pp. 85–6 ) .
  Next page