Example sentences of "[Wh det] [pron] [verb] [prep] [det] " in BNC.

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1 The maxim on which I act at any moment is the personal rule which is guiding my behaviour — for Kant it is of the essence of voluntary action that there is such a maxim in every case .
2 Then came the delicious moment of the aperitivo , that sense of the whole city beginning to wind down towards lunch , which I took at any one of a dozen excellent and welcoming restaurants where I was sure to be hailed and called over to one table or another .
3 With the leave of the House , Mr. Deputy Speaker , I wish once again to refer to the St. Kentigern-Oatridge problem , which is repeated in all our constituencies in one form or another , and which I recommend to some diligent Peer in the other place .
4 In many ways it is an abbreviated version of my earlier work Flying Model Helicopters , which I recommend for those who require a fuller appreciation of the subject .
5 However I do not recall hearing of any problem every being experienced by low-flying military hardware or cruise-level GA over Madley Earth Station which I managed for several years prior to my retirement last year , and which I believe is a much larger facility than Oakhanger .
6 I have a business to run and a home of my own , which I prefer to this rather flashy place of yours . ’
7 Mother knitted a white cotton quilt before she married , which I treasure to this day .
8 I 'm just describing my attitude at the time , which I shared with most of my fellow students : an attitude of complete boredom and feeling that nothing was worth making an effort for .
9 ‘ For the dearth of beer which I foresee on this trip . ’
10 I soon felt hungry and thirsty , and my first food was fruit which I found on some trees near a river .
11 I was also gratified by the immense good will and friendship towards Britain which I encountered on all sides .
12 The view which I share with such disparate theorists as Antonio Gramsci and Max Weber is that the model of lawyers as both agents of the bourgeoisie and translators is correct theoretically as well as empirically .
13 I remember the books which I read in that time with a great love .
14 For that reason I shall not attempt some neat separation of the ethical theories which I discuss into these two classes .
15 ‘ And the body beneath , which you display to such obvious advantage . ’
16 I have therefore to agree with both the councils , that the comments you have just made and which you make at some length in your proof on this point , amount in effect to a late objection .
17 You can do this each year on a percentage basis which you set for that year on the basis of your knowledge of the church-going habits of the congregation .
18 As someone bereaved through the disease , I felt angry and upset by the flippancy with which you dealt with this subject .
19 But an acknowledgment of bias is not a license to parade personal prejudice as sound reasoning , which you do in this issue .
20 The second gate leads to a road , which you cross to another road opposite leading to Far Arnside Caravan Park .
21 Er so if you look at their smoking erm people can fill in a kind of smoking chart in which you look at that .
22 So if there 's anything , there 's a slightly different approach to it , and one thing that we are being urged to do , through the very way in which you mentioned in another context , is to make sure that facilities are appropriate locally , and developing policies within that .
23 peoples , can affect where you , which erm , which you needed for some
24 Me say me wan% go , you know , listen to some sound , and then " e say " you cyaan go sound , you too young to go sound " I say " Wha you mean by that ? "
25 Its advent was auspicious in that following the Second World War the strenuous efforts of many social scientists , especially in the United States , to secure a more acceptable place for social science , which itself contributed to many of the techniques which became part of variable analysis , was served by a way of thinking which seemed to offer a way of emulating some of the crucial features of the scientific method .
26 In the middle of an ancient henge — now no more than a bank — which itself sits within many other circles , lies an old , roofless church .
27 Liza , distraught at the news , came home on compassionate leave , which she spent in such a state of shock and distress that Harriet began to feel that the sooner she returned to her duties the better .
28 A woman with an ‘ afflicted ’ husband told the 1888 Select Committee on Sweating that she ‘ finished ’ four pairs of trousers a day , for which she made at most 1/2d , that her wages were 4d per day less than four years previously , and that after paying her rent , she had 5/ a week on which to keep her three children , her husband and herself .
29 ‘ Ingested that from which she died at that meal ? ’
30 Robyn , doing her best to ignore the almost overwhelming feeling of pure dislike which she had for this man , glanced at the ornate carriage clock beside the bed , registered the time slowly and looked aghast .
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