Example sentences of "[prep] [noun] which [modal v] " in BNC.

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1 Both men made for the Mediterranean eventually , for reasons which may have involved a respite from British miseries and injustice .
2 The character on stage , for reasons which may possibly be explained by the insertion of a line or two into the script , wears a deaf-aid … ’
3 The interviewer is trying to find out if you left your last job for reasons which could pose similar problems if you came to work with his/her firm .
4 For reasons which need not concern us here , they have become almost solely used on the tail rotor servo of model helicopters to assist in controlling the tail and are known as tail rotor gyros or just ‘ gyros ’ .
5 Nuclear weapons can not escape from the kinds of restraints built up carefully in the laws-of-war tradition over the centuries , but there is a risk that they may be thought to be so escaping ( especially in view of the UK and US reservations to 1977 Geneva Protocol I ) unless positive action in this direction is taken , The comparative neglect of the whole subject of laws-of-war restrictions on the use of nuclear weapons has endured for forty years , for reasons which can be understood if not approved .
6 For reasons which can not affect any legal issue arising for determination and which , therefore , their Lordships do not need to examine , the Director of Public Prosecutions ( ‘ D.P.P. ’ ) ,
7 For reasons which can only be guessed at he decided to establish himself near Keswick in Cumberland and returned in the following year with Hans Loner , a relative by marriage , and twelve German workers , to set up works and to prospect more fully .
8 As the months have passed , it his become clear that something like a campaign of disinformation has been waged , for reasons which can still only be guessed at .
9 Section 2 , ( a ) and ( b ) , of the Statute is not relied on here , for reasons which will be obvious later .
10 for reasons which will become clear in due course , I prefer not to specify which one .
11 However , for reasons which will appear later , we have replaced the σ 3 -row with the implicit x 3 -row ( making the σ 3 -row implicit ) .
12 For reasons which will become clear subsequently we will refer to P1 as problem 0 .
13 Eadmer has left an exceptionally full account of the Easter Council at St Peter 's in April 1099 ; and for reasons which will become apparent later , this was his last full-scale account of any great event in Anselm 's life .
14 We choose to do this in terms of a simplified version of the computer described in the paper ‘ Preliminary discussion of the logical design of an electronic computing instrument ’ by Burks , Goldstine , and Von Neumann ( 1946 ) , for reasons which will be mentioned later .
15 The set of all polynomials with coefficients in Q will , for reasons which will emerge in Section 1.8 , be denoted , as usual , by Q[x] .
16 It is worth formalising the situation , for reasons which will emerge later .
17 For reasons which will become apparent in due course , it is necessary to restrict the type of sentence used in the definition .
18 For reasons which will appear it is necessary first to refer to the legislation affecting the taxation of benefits in kind before 1975 .
19 Deaf people , whether they be children , young people or adults , have always posed something of a challenge to generalised policies of integration , for reasons which will be laid out clearly below .
20 For reasons which will become apparent , I will not provide more than a brief overview of this approach .
21 Then the matrix product has components C is known as the right Cauchy-Green deformation tensor for reasons which will become apparent later .
22 It will not escape notice that , first , this question enquires about the verb and the adjective together , not the adjective alone ; and , second , this is precisely the form of question that can be used for a single , unmodified transitive verb : ( 9 ) Lionel shredded the memoranda what did Lionel do to the memoranda ? 5.2 For reasons which will become apparent , we shall call the adjectives in this structure adverbal adjectives .
23 The one group who placed ( i ) towards the end of their story did so for reasons which will be discussed shortly .
24 Some present detailed programmes for change which will require legislation , for instance , legislation to improve the levels of pension and older people 's access to employment .
25 The practice has been for the judge to deduct a period for remission which might be earned , and to advise the Home Secretary that what remains is the requirement of retribution and deterrence .
26 Further to the entry in the January Notes Hilary Weedon is still appealing for clubs which might be spared for a youth club .
27 The problem for capitalism was that this rule was always problematic because of the pressure from the working class and non-monopoly capital for policies which would question the interests of monopoly capital .
28 Other coins made from the same different die can often be found , thus establishing a chain of die links between objects which might otherwise display no close similarities .
29 Critics might say the charters are merely PR exercises for pledges which should already be standard requirements of the health service .
30 PR exercises for pledges which should already be standard requirements of the health service .
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