Example sentences of "[Wh det] [vb base] [prep] this [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Some of the defended sites which remain outside this network could be considered an extension of this system .
2 It is hoped that the changes have also been important to the disabled people who are now involved in the work of the project ; all of the quotes which appear in this chapter are theirs .
3 Those in search of the classical paradise of golden beaches and tranquillity must treat Tahiti merely as a landing stage , and move on to better things , to nearby coral islands , lagoons and atolls , all of which abound in this part of the Pacific .
4 The curious , at times seemingly perverse , ambiguity in which the terms of the contract are from time to time expressed is an added reason why no one who has to wrestle with the problems which abound in this area should fail to arm himself with this book .
5 Sandstones with compositions which plot in this area are therefore much more susceptible to diagenetic change than those with compositions nearer a quartzose sandstone ( Fig. 5.42 ) ; they thus have a much higher diagenetic potential .
6 This is a lesson well learned in terms of the aquarium also , as it is quite impossible to keep reef-building corals and the large number of anemones and various other coelenterates which depend on this association with zooxanthellae , in captivity , without high-intensity lighting of the correct spectral range .
7 In any case , in the liberal view , the significance of class struggle must be weighed against other divisions which cut across this struggle and limit its importance .
8 The spectacle of young people deferring to others and flagrantly performing small selfless acts of charity in the local area leaves a very bad taste in the mouth and gives an entirely distorted view of the standards which obtain at this school .
9 To offer the maximum exposure to tax-free collective investment , managers must be able to provide ‘ old ’ PEPs ( ie have started PEPs in the tax year 1988-89 ) plus new PEPs which run in this tax year .
10 When the sick and exhausted Armenians reached Beirut after the Ottoman collapse , they were allowed to build shacks on the swamps of Bourj Hammoud in the east of the city and then to erect houses which look to this day curiously Balkan , their wooden balconies hanging over the narrow streets of Camp Marash .
11 But , as Jessop shows , by insisting on the plurality of forces around the state and also arguing that the ruling class must always win out in any politics which flow from this conflict .
12 In order to overcome the problems which flow from this lack of legal personality , the Crown Proceedings Act 1947 was passed giving rights of action against the executive branch of government either by suing specified departments in their own name or by suing the Attorney-General on behalf of the Crown .
13 The first development of the Keynesian system which we shall consider revolves around the important distinction between classical and Keynesian unemployment and highlights the policy implications which flow from this distinction .
14 Bears , squirrels and badgers are some of the many animals which overwinter in this way .
15 What are the wage-price dynamics which ensue from this contraction in aggregate demand ?
16 Whatever one may argue for the value of research findings which ensue from this technique ( and certainly the publication of Down and Out must have come as a revelation to many people in present-day Britain ) the question must be squarely faced as to whether the social researcher has a right to deceive and manipulate people for research purposes .
17 The strong , imaginative storylines contain the elements of fantasy and humour which appeal to this age group .
18 ‘ By 1996 , 90 of all nights spent by Federal employees in hotels must be spent in those which comply with this law , ’ he said .
19 The important points which emerge from this case are that the employer will be able to rely on this part of the duty of fidelity if it can be shown that the employee works for a trade competitor in his spare time and : ( a ) knows of business secrets which may be of use to the competitor and/or ( b ) occupies a position which makes it expedient to recognise the existence of his duty to work for the employer alone .
20 The principles of design which emerge from this development will be available for application to further areas of the mathematics curriculum .
21 Families which operate in this way might be expected to break up but they usually do not do so .
22 Ideally , we should like the government to ensure that the economy is on the Pareto-efficient frontier , shown in Figure 15–2 , but take responsibility for making the value judgement about which point on this frontier the economy should attain .
23 The successful communicator selects just those features which differ from this schema , enabling the receiver to adjust it and to bring it closer to the individual instance which is being described .
24 The Cartesian coordinates which result from this transformation describe a space which is tangential to the curved space at the point selected .
25 Most fish live in water which varies from pH to 8.7 , although there are some species which live outside this range .
26 Cichlasoma fenestratum — just one of the many Cichlids which live in this area .
27 All over England the enclosure of each area produced a local form of architecture and building materials for the farmhouses which date from this period .
28 Those being the relevant facts , I turn to consider the important issues of law which arise on this appeal .
29 Just as parents sometimes feel caught in the middle of competing demands which arise from this conflict , so also do residential workers , often in more extreme ways .
30 The difficulties which arise from this structure are familiar from the debates in feminism , where , woman , seems to be offered an alternative of either being the ‘ other ’ as constituted by man , that is , conforming to the stereotypes of patriarchy , or , if she is to avoid this , of being an absolute ‘ other ’ outside knowledge , necessarily confined to inarticulate expressions of mysticism or jouissance .
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