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

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1 As noted above , stipulations in commercial contracts which fix time limits for action by the parties are normally interpreted as conditions , so that a failure to perform on time entitles the other party to terminate the contract .
2 The intention here is that victims do not have to pursue claims against manufacturers in foreign countries which may have less favourable laws .
3 However , there is also evidence the emergence of serious skill shortages in some occupations which may prejudice the county 's ability to prepare for the longer term challenges of the Tunnel and the Single European Market .
4 Although it is possible to ‘ hedge ’ against this risk by operating on the ‘ forward ’ market , this involves traders in additional costs which would not exist if exchange rates were fixed .
5 she had fat knees in ginger stockings which kept straying apart … he could see she was wearing apricot knickers ;
6 He has just published a profusely illustrated catalogue of fine books in fine bindings which has been described as an important reference work on its subject .
7 Yorkshire field their strongest team for years in their bid to redress their relatively mediocre performances in recent seasons which have seen them lose two of the last three encounters against Durham .
8 Good start and I 've found by adopting this approach I 've been able to erm help clients in many areas which has saved them tax or making their money work harder for them .
9 Even worse , they produce proteins in large quantities which are very similar to those in our own body .
10 The main examples of general education planned in terms of the society or culture are the American high school and the polytechnical schools in the Eastern bloc countries , but the model has also influenced secondary education in Scandinavia and the secondary-modern type schools in those countries which have a selective secondary system .
11 Many wave-energy researchers believe that the consistently unfavourable attitude of the EC towards wave power has its origins in unfavourable assessments which were provided for the Community by the British government .
12 Also there are elements in these sculptures which can not properly be understood if one has not first considered the contemporary revolution in painting .
13 However , he also suggested he would prefer to restrict the use of the concept of ‘ liminality ’ to those ritual periods in small-scale societies which all must pass through , and use the term ‘ liminoid ’ for those anti-structural periods personified by the ‘ counter-culture ’ of the 1960s ( 1978 : 287 ) .
14 The program will keep each teacher 's texts and the exercises generated on those texts in separate files which are only accessible using that teacher 's password .
15 Another way of stating this point would be to say that the revival and growth of social movements in those societies which are both economically advanced and have a fairly long tradition of democracy , is a major aspect of that ‘ self-production ’ of society referred to earlier , which exists in some degree already , but is still more an ideal representation of a future form of society , ‘ free of domination ’ , in which the collectivity would really govern itself , by procedures of rational discussion among equal citizens .
16 But the idea of founding fixed royal chapels in strategic places which could provide incomes for royal chaplains was already formed .
17 The sharp end of routine policing always falls on the economically marginal , those who live out their lives in public places which routine police patrols regulate , and those who are not integrated into the mainstream institutions of economic and political life .
18 Stevenson is also anxious that we should not dismiss with contempt the more completely non-rational aspects of ethical discussion in which we affect each other 's ethical attitudes by the use of emotive language or influence each other 's emotions in other ways which do not require the mediation of rationally based changes in belief .
19 Moreover the commonly held view that the rational expectations hypothesis is the natural offspring of neoclassical and new classical economics has considerably limited the wider application of the concept of rational expectations in macroeconomic models which do not take the assumption of market clearing as their point of departure .
20 It calls itself socialist , but wins seats in rural constituencies which have no time for socialism .
21 The neglect of the needs of those disabled after retirement age is excused by reference to the growth in pensioners ' incomes in recent years which , of course , overlooks the acute poverty among older people with disabilities and the fact that the growth in incomes has been concentrated among better-off pensioners .
22 This kind of analysis sees Japanese uniqueness begin from the basic subversion of individualism into collectivism and traces the implications in cultural patterns which are distinctively different from Western ones .
23 to the extent to which regard should be had to the range of awards in other cases which are comparable such cases should as a rule be those which have been determined in the same jurisdiction or in a neighbouring locality where similar social , economic and industrial conditions exist .
24 As in the case of an award for pain and suffering , the assessment of damages for loss of amenities is based upon the level of awards in previous cases which appear to be comparable or , failing such awards , upon " impression based of necessity in large measure on the combination of intuition and experience " : per Bridge LJ in Hughes v Goodall , a decision of the Court of Appeal on 18 February 1977 .
25 Most clubs tend to be rather informal arrangements by a group of banks in different countries which agree to support and provide a better customer service by means of reciprocal lending arrangements .
26 NORTH Wales MEP Joe Wilson is supporting plans to use European grants to fund food processing plants in rural areas which he says would create jobs and help protect rural communities .
27 Students accumulate credits in individual subjects which they study , either out of interest or because they wish to obtain the award of a Group Certificate or Diploma .
28 We can begin to foresee the time when old people will not spend their last years in large wards which lack privacy or any pretence at being homely . ’
29 Thirdly , it was not just the bald declarations of innocence that impressed me , but the nature and quality of those declarations : there were passages in both books which , as in Meehan 's letters to me , had the sharp ring of truth .
30 On the other hand , there are some regional variations in economic terms which may have increasing impact on the resources available to be shared in families , especially the rising value of property in the south of England and the better job opportunities there .
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