Example sentences of "[noun pl] which all [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Initial feedback from staff has been encouraging and I hope that this will be reflected in the questionnaires which all staff in BBD have been asked to complete .
2 The recent emphasis on ‘ human resources ’ under London managing director Roger Faxon ( an American ) is evident in the new-style contracts which all experts were obliged to sign by 1 April .
3 Of course there is a core range of skills which all actuaries must possess in order to qualify .
4 The ability to respond in crisis is one of the skills which all teachers must possess .
5 Their twin purpose is to protect the core group from numerical employment fluctuations while conducting the host of non-specific and subsidiary activities which all organizations require and generate .
6 One set of institutions in Britain which does practise direct democracy to some extent is that of student unions , which are governed in part by general meetings which all students are entitled to attend .
7 Chomsky suggests that there is a ‘ universal grammar ’ — a limited set of rules which all languages follow .
8 The personal and life experiences which all practitioners bring to practice can enrich nursing , midwifery and health visiting teams and , in turn , the care they give .
9 Hence the warranties will sometimes state matters which all parties know to be incorrect .
10 There are three particular versions which all shops should carry if they have the space : Eliot Gardiner on Philips , Hogwood on l'Oiseau Lyre , and McGegan on Harmonia Mundi .
11 And then there were the noises … the rock of the mountain itself stirring from its immeasurable slumber ; the painful groaning of timbers carrying terrible burdens ; the distorted echoes of dripping water , and unseen men at their tasks … and the unexplained sounds which all miners know about but rarely speak of .
12 These benchmarks would indicate to teachers the things which all children ought to know at a particular stage of their development .
13 We have yet to make a balanced assessment of the real price exacted from humanity for those things which all politicians promise in ever greater abundance .
14 There was to be the usual share of pain and difficulties which all families face : nursing sick children and elderly parents , for instance ; financial problems in the early days , coping with children 's temperamental difficulties and problems at school .
15 It 's the organisation which erm universities themselves have set up and finance in order to promote those interests which all universities have in common , and this includes negotiations with the Government about erm money , it includes negotiations with erm university staff , erm and it includes a general service function of monitoring legislation , Government activity which affects universities , and generally promoting the universities in the public consciousness .
16 Further divisions concerned the date for presidential elections which all sides agreed should supersede the mid-1989 elections [ see p. 36828 ] in the light of the constitutional reforms enacted since then .
17 The league is the benchmark for standards which all factories are battling to attain and the competition is continuous and always very fierce . ’
18 The erm point about are distribution within Greater York is that we have attempted to look at this in what I think is a a rational and realistic manner , we have looked , and you 'll see this from our supplementary paper , I apologize for its lateness , but I think it 's benefited from the additional thought that could be given to it , we have looked both backwards , at the present day , and forwards , we 've looked backwards at past build rates , we 've looked at the present day position in the sense of the population shares within Greater York , and we 've looked forwards in terms of the commitment figures that are given in the N Y one paper that we 've just been looking at , and taking all those things into account , and adding in what we see as the right location for a new settlement , namely Selby district , we come to the figures that are in our supplementary paper , and there is clearly a great deal of common ground between the evidence you get from looking either at past building rates or population shares , as now , or future commitments which all point towards a broadly similar distribution , we say , with the addition of a new feature namely the new settlement , so that I commend those figures to you as somebody who 's actually dared to put their toe , or maybe their whole body into the water , and given you not only some numbers , but also a basis by which if you should er have a different Greater York figure in mind , a basis on which that could be rationally er approached , I would not certainly defend to the last ditch the need to put a figure of fifty dwellings into the structure plan for the Hambledon part of Greater York , there may be a cut off point beyond which you do n't go , but certainly for Ryedale and Selby , with very substantial numbers there is a need to indicate what the appropriate division should be , and you could not for instance indicate what the er Ryedale non Greater York figure was , without someone telling us the , as the Chairman rightly said , having an idea of what the Ryedale Greater York figure should be , so it is n't really I think feasible to have district figures for non Greater York , and one Greater York figure , that does n't er get away from the issue , and nor does it solve the potential for confusion .
19 The question is whether something approaching a Bill of Rights for students would not be worthwhile , spelling out the academic freedoms which all students have the right to expect .
20 Its dominance rests not just on its material position in society but also on the power attributes which all bureaucracies possess — a hierarchical concentration of authority , the exclusion of mass involvement in decision-making , the specialization of functions — ‘ in short , a scientific organization of inequality , which became the principle of a new form of class oppression ’ ( Lefort 1986 , p. 115 ) .
21 Having identified the scope of the ‘ problem ’ the paper will cover the wider issues which all organisations or companies will need to face regarding the status and role of e-mail records .
22 In this Pensions Special , we have brought together a top team of writers to address some of the key factors which all people who are concerned to have as comfortable a retirement as possible should take into account .
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