Example sentences of "which [vb -s] [art] [adj] [noun] to " in BNC.
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31 | Before that it was in a similar condition to the cottage next door which has the original entrance to the spa . |
32 | A laccolith is a type of sill which has thickened to produce a dome which causes the overlying rock to be upwarped . |
33 | There is the comment which allows a black perspective to momentarily emerge ( ‘ Blacks reckon the opposite ; they reckon the police are picking on them' ) . |
34 | The organisations have been selected from both the UK and North America , which allows a valuable comparison to be made across the two cultures . |
35 | However it is possible to find a method which allows the additional information to be removed from the tree ( as previously mentioned in section 4.5.1.2 ) . |
36 | The more normal situation is for every exchange of words to take place in a context which allows the verbal activity to be associated with other kinds of activity and other kinds of message . |
37 | Bear in mind , however , that most of the work I was doing was word processing , which allows the hard disk to be powered down for most of the time . |
38 | When depreciation is deducted from gross investment , we have what is called net investment and it is this which measures the true addition to the country 's capital stock during the year . |
39 | Lloyd is caught up in a worldwide agreement which limits a foreign-based jockey to a 30-day stay . |
40 | Therefore the choice of must be a compromise which limits the charging current to within the supply capacity , but ensures that the capacitor is fully charged as quickly as possible . |
41 | He proposed an approach to the principled description of such contexts which bears a close resemblance to more recent descriptions which we shall go on to examine : |
42 | Similarly , to take another case , we might think of the real essence of a circle , a figure which bears a constant relation to some one point , as an indication of how , along Hobbesian lines , to generate or construct one . |
43 | The protagonist also feels the need to insulate herself emotionally , a form of protectionism which bears a problematic resemblance to the cultural chauvinism and xenophobia she witnesses during the war . |
44 | This is a recess in the hall which is set apart for tea and music and is characterized by a certain daintiness of treatment which bears a feminine relation to the masculine ruggedness of the hall … at the opposite end is the ‘ refectory' ’ … . |
45 | A study which adopts a critical attitude to this conventional axiom is Wild and Hill 's analysis of job satisfaction and labour turnover among women in the electronics industry . |
46 | Finally another clover was also measured under these conditions , see Figure , which shows a similar conclusion to . |
47 | An allowance is given for each dependent child other than the applicant and the resultant net income is then compared with a scale which shows the parental contribution to school fees , the balance being met by the Scottish Education Department . |
48 | Feminists have paid particular attention to the way in which an ideology which assigns a primary role to women as mothers informs medical control of reproduction . |
49 | The smart metalled road which links the new colonies to Aurobindo Marg gives out a few hundred feet before you get to the village . |
50 | This month : Ariston 's CD3 ( a careful , thorough and successful implementation of a ‘ standard ’ kit of parts ) , SD Acoustics ' Ribbon speaker ( a vastly different design from the norm which repays a thoughtful approach to system building ) and last but not least , Linn 's Karik/Numerik CD player . |
51 | Examples of this category of adaptation would be the entry of Constable Dull and Costard ( Love 's Labour 's Lost , I.i.181 ) , which reduces the assembled company to prose , or the more serious cross-examination performed by Angelo and Escalus ( Measure for Measure , II.i.45 ) . |
52 | Of the total population of around 33,000 , some 11,000 live in the area north of the railway line which forms the southern boundary to the experimental area . |
53 | We began this section by noting that , unlike the United States which takes a structural approach to anti-trust policy , in which the possession of monopoly power is itself regarded as objectionable , the UK has taken a more open view of the benefits of promoting competition . |
54 | I repeat it here , as in sections 3.3 to 3.5 we will be looking at three different theories , each of which takes a different starting-point to the debate over the service economy , which in turn influences their conceptual framework and what counts as valid kinds of evidence . |
55 | Waldron refers to a justification of property along these lines as a right-based argument for private property , which he defines as ‘ an argument which takes an individual interest to be sufficiently important in itself to justify holding others ( especially the government ) to be under duties to create , secure , maintain , or respect an institution of private property ’ . |
56 | As stated earlier , the purpose of this book is to examine certain aspects of company law from a particular point of view : one which takes the relevant rules to be part of the machinery by which power , and particularly what we have called social decision-making power , is sustained and regulated . |
57 | Both in Lambeth and Liverpool councillors were seeking to exploit a legal loophole — the absence of any statutory date for setting a rate-subsequently removed by the Local Government Act 1986 ( which requires a legal rate to be set by 1 April ) . |
58 | They can not have teachers ready to respond to the rapidly changing social milieu ( the educational needs context ) which requires an extended approach to professionality , and at the same time expect to manage them in a modified bureaucracy which is predicated upon a restricted view . |
59 | They must be able to show measurable improvements in the quality of their services over the past two years , and customer satisfaction , and they must have in hand or plan to introduce at least one innovative enhancement to their services which entails no additional cost to the taxpayer or consumer . |
60 | Much more pressing considerations may produce a sullen acceptance of the existing social order which entails no strong commitment to the status quo . |