Example sentences of "which a [noun sg] [vb mod] [verb] [art] " in BNC.

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1 I urge my hon. Friend to examine more carefully the health arrangements in many European Community countries , because Britain is one of the few in which a patient may visit a general practitioner and receive hospital treatment free of charge .
2 " In general , Lenneberg 's ( 1967 ) contention that the extent to which a speaker will have a foreign accent correlates fairly well with the age at which the second language is learned has received extensive confirmation .
3 This may have been one way in which a girl could emulate the " lad o' pairts " and improve herself through education .
4 This is the ultimate occasion in which a man can attack a woman 's reputation and conduct with impunity .
5 There is also a special utility called a HAM Package for amateur radio enthusiasts , in which a user can enter a call sign and the position of the remote station will be marked on the map , together with the local time and location information .
6 There is also a special utility called a HAM Package for amateur radio enthusiasts , in which a user can enter a call sign and the position of the remote station will be marked on the map , together with the local time and location information .
7 To find an issuer , he turns to his stable of MTNs , pre-arranged programmes under which a company can issue a variety of securities .
8 Other British Overseas Trade Board facilities include ; an assessment by the overseas post of the market potential of a product in a specified market — an ‘ Export Market Enquiry ’ ; the Export Representative Service , through which a company can obtain a short-list of potential agents or distributors specifically tailored to its requirements ; and the Export Intelligence Service which provides ( to subscribers ) information on current market opportunities for particular products on a world-wide basis .
9 In Dundee 's Northern College , the Values Education Project developed a methodology through which a school could identify the values it already holds and set targets to grow from there .
10 Admittedly the examples all relate to men , since it is easier to imagine ways in which a male may lose the ‘ capacity ’ for intercourse but what is sauce for the goose must be sauce for the gander .
11 This position must be based on whether there is evidence on which a court could make an Order in Care Proceedings .
12 There is no single criterion by which a scientist must judge the merit or promise of a paradigm , and further , proponents of competing programmes will subscribe to different sets of standards and will even view the world in different ways and describe it in a different language .
13 The cash value to be placed upon a first appointment as writer or cadet is uncertain , for it obviously depended upon the number of years in which a candidate would draw the salary , but contemporaries no doubt took the possibility of an early death from disease into account when they spoke of a value of £1,000 .
14 These vessels were fitted with a ‘ wet chamber ’ through which a diver could leave the submarine and , it was hoped , make an underwater inspection of the Russian ships in the harbour .
15 This module aims to provide a framework within which a student can maximise the benefits to be gained from a programme which integrates education , training and work experience .
16 One was configuration — that is , the right size with the right payload from the routes on which a jet would give an airline the greatest advantage .
17 There may arise circumstances in which a doctor may use a form of treatment for his patient 's benefit aware of the fact that it may have the secondary effect of accelerating ( or run the risk of accelerating ) the patient 's death .
18 Major new legislation in the Consumer Protection Act 1987 ( CPA ) has changed the basis on which a victim can sue a producer , introduced new criminal offences and extended the powers of the safety enforcement authorities .
19 Strict liability has become a basis on which a victim can sue a producer .
20 However , it seems that the relation is not quite the same , for there is no comparable way in which a hearer can express the same wonder or wish by assenting to the sentence as uttered by the speaker .
21 There is a whole range of ways in which a hearer could recover the required parallelisms .
22 This is highly price sensitive information from which a conglomerate could make a profit or avoid a loss , but it would rarely constitute a breach of the the Company Securities ( Insider Dealing ) Act 1985 .
23 There is something insulting about the way in which a stranger can visit a place which is forbidden to people with infinitely more interest in such a journey .
24 This does not fall within the class of cases in respect of which a corporation can maintain an action , but does fall within the second class commented on by Pollock C.B. in his judgment in the case of the Metropolitan Saloon Omnibus Co .
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