Example sentences of "[Wh det] [pron] [adv] [verb] " in BNC.
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1 | Very often the chair in which the dead person used to sit most when they were alive , becomes a chair in which no-one else sits . |
2 | An intrinsic and notorious part of the '70s rock scene , Kiss created a personal performing arena for themselves which no-one else dared to enter , with their outrageous costumes and make-up , extravagant stage presentations and riffy pop-metal songs . |
3 | More positive thinking survived in one or two parts of the monolithic building in Queen Anne 's Gate , but the overall impression gained by outside observers was of a dispirited department in which no-one really seemed to know what could be done about crime in general and the prisons in particular . |
4 | It would be counter-productive to include a clause which no-one really regards as appropriate to the particular circumstances of the firm just because that clause is commonly found in the precedent books : better by far to leave it out until agreement on a satisfactory alternative can be agreed . |
5 | He describes ufology as ‘ a war zone in which everyone desperately defends their own theory and hates everyone else . ’ |
6 | But when we got there we found that the mountain we had perceived from the map to be the Cathedral , and which everyone else had perceived to be the Cathedral , was in fact another mountain altogether . |
7 | After the trauma of the discovery of Gebrec 's body and Dora 's subsequent clash with Dieter , the exit from Les Châtaigniers was accomplished with minimum fuss , thanks to Jack 's decisiveness and air of quiet authority to which everyone willingly submitted . |
8 | Clearly this meets a felt need for which nothing previously composed was quite appropriate . |
9 | ‘ Close to Eden is a good looking film let down by a convoluted and complex plot in which nothing really happens . |
10 | B. ’ A day elapsed in which nothing further occurred . |
11 | From the moment he modelled himself on Mussolini , he resembled nothing so much as an actor touring the provinces in a play which someone else had made a success of in London . |
12 | Of course , ten p.m. on a winter 's night , when one was a lady of leisure expected to be indoors enjoying a meal which someone else had cooked , was perhaps a bit much . |
13 | At home , going out shopping , at school , at work , we give out messages which someone else receives . |
14 | On the one hand is the car dealer who buys and displays for sale a car which someone else has previously ‘ clocked , ’ i. e. turned back the odometer . |
15 | It can happen that the ownership of one person is subject to certain rights which someone else has over the goods . |
16 | write , you write and er feed into the thing which it operates along the rules defined by its firmware which someone else has put into it . |
17 | Yes , any behaviour that is used inappropriately and compulsively to suppress uncomfortable emotions , or to gain a sense of elation in order to change a disordered mood , or to which someone repeatedly returns despite negative consequences , can be a form of addictive disease . |
18 | My hon. Friend and the hon. Gentleman have established several points with which I strongly agree . |
19 | Laid for white tourists , this road hugs the flat land by the lakeside , going nowhere in particular , while the road south through the communal area which I soon turn onto is much busier , yet is untarred and in many places steep and treacherous . |
20 | ‘ Go home , dear girl , you will die of heat on your bicycle , ’ the women under the arcades would say to me in their strange Parmigiano dialect ( which I soon learned to understand but never to speak ) as I rode past . |
21 | As I clambered out of the trench and sat on the grass with my back to a tree he handed me a mess-tin full of very tasty Machonachie stew which I soon polished off . |
22 | You 're asked to support the general move , that we have set out from this report , and you 're asked to agree to St Clements and East Ward , and I think we 've heard Mandy and Phil acknowledge that there may well be a case for looking at an area of council housing , which we will leave them to do , and also to approve the set of objectives , which I particularly welcome , on page sixty-two and sixty-three , which will amount to a work programme , which I would have thought we were all very pleased to see . |
23 | The cases to which I particularly desire to refer are : Fenner v. Blake[1900]lQ.B.426 ; Re Wickham(1917)34 T.L.R. 158 ; Re William Porter & Co . |
24 | ‘ There 's a shop there called L'Homme which I particularly like . ’ |
25 | Above my head was a half gallery which I later discovered had been traditionally the sleeping-quarters of the miller 's apprentice . |
26 | The show was called The Mary Whitehouse Experience ( which I later learned was in honour of the blue-nose lady who 's always sounding off about too much sex in the media ) . |
27 | Haseley Crawford was trying to intimidate everybody , which I later learned was his usual pre-race gambit . |
28 | In both cases I worked on oil on panel which I later fixed to the walls . |
29 | But if I insist on forcing the spontaneous towards an end which I already deem rational , I remain imprisoned within a circle of old concepts , reason goes on doing the same kind of sums , there can be no novelty except the discovery of unnoticed implications of the familiar . |
30 | The picture could be executed by a company called Scanachrome in which I already had some interest and it seemed like a good opportunity to get involved with the process . |