Example sentences of "which in [noun sg] [verb] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 In the sea , the complexities are compounded by tides and currents , bringing pollutants sometimes from thousands of miles away , and from the sheer number of possible sources of pollutant — sewage works , factories , and agricultural fields — which feed into the rivers which in turn run into the sea .
2 But within the arts , and indeed within any one discipline or medium , one can distinguish the ‘ scholarly ’ emphasis on textual and historical accuracy from the more interpretative and responsive ‘ readings ’ , which in turn differ from the active , creative mode of ‘ doing ’ the arts .
3 The ease with which one can learn a concept depends critically on the structure of the predicate p , which in turn depends on the description language .
4 The selling price of a book stems principally from the number of copies which are printed , which in turn depends upon the publisher 's estimate of the likely demand for the book .
5 The phenomena of the longue durée are background conditions that help to explain conjonctures , which in turn contribute to the explanation of événements .
6 For every word ending in the letter sequence -ing , there is a separate set of three nodes in the tree , one for the i , which points to the node for the n , which in turn points to the node for the g .
7 ‘ A cop is what a single woollen thread is wound onto , which in turn fits inside the shuttles for the weft looms .
8 He became increasingly authoritarian and reliant upon the army , which in turn led to the eight years of Amin 's rule , the Tanzanian invasion , Obote 's second government and ultimately the civil war in which Museveni took power .
9 I had brought off a successful forced landing , with no damage to man or machine , and afterwards I was able to describe the symptoms which led to the failure , which in turn led to the fault being found and cured .
10 It failed because it precipitated a managerial revolution in Courtaulds , which in turn led to the defeat of the bid and the rapid recovery of the company .
11 The reduction in inhibition allows greater expression of the NMDA receptor system which in turn contributes to the depolarization and thus further reduces the level of the Mg 2+ block .
12 Secondly , it is well known that the impact of the rediscovery of poverty in the 1880s helped to bring about a much more complex analysis of poverty and its causes , which in turn looked toward the State to begin to solve the problem .
13 This is reflected in the religion , which in turn serves as the model for traditional Hindu society .
14 His argument is that the penetration of capitalism into the countryside leads to the articulation of the capitalist mode with the subsistence economy , which in turn leads to the diversification of the village economy , with wage migration becoming an increasing part of rural life .
15 North Kaibab is a maintained trail which begins on a series of steep switchbacks , plunging down the side of Roaring Springs Canyon , a tributary of Bright Angel Canyon , which in turn leads to the Colorado .
16 It leads to a break-down in communication between people , which in turn leads to the loss of relationships .
17 Piaget argues that the ability to handle psychological content develops before the ability to handle physical content , which in turn develops before the ability to handle logical content .
18 He referred the matter to the UN which in turn complained to the FAO .
19 The new districts were very largely based on amalgamations of existing district authorities which in turn derived from the sanitary districts created in the mid-nineteenth century .
20 The Beveridge Report , which formed the basis of much of the post-war social security legislation , contained certain features which in part led to the need to reform the pension system .
21 So there was some basis for supposing that the appellants had been informed in writing , that their obligation was only not to sell the property , rather than the wider terms which in fact applied to the injunction .
22 It is a long established rule of law that where a contracting party refuses to perform his contractual obligations by giving a wrong reason , this does not subsequently deprive him of a justification which in fact existed at the time of refusal ( see Taylor v Oakes ( 1922 ) 27 Com Cas 261 ; Braithwaite v Foreign Hardwood Co Ltd [ 1905 ] 2 KB 543 ; and Fercometal SARL v Mediterranean Shipping Co SA [ 1989 ] AC 788 discussed in Chapter 15 ) .
23 It rejects the theoretical approach which claims University but which in fact consists of the interplay , in a closed system , of motives of atomistic , undifferentiated , instantly-adjusting ‘ agents ’ .
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