Example sentences of "[Wh det] [vb -s] [adv prt] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | This week it 's our drama series , Family Pride , the country 's first Asian soap opera , which goes out at teatime on Thursdays and will soon be shown three nights a week on Channel Four . |
2 | STOCKTON , thumped by 40 points in their last two games , ring the changes up front for tomorrow 's attractive home match with West Hartlepool , which kicks off at noon . |
3 | Martin Saunders retains the full back position for the hastily arranged game at Middlesbrough , which kicks off at noon . |
4 | he believes cumulative stress which builds up over time , should be classified as an industrial injury for which people can claim compensation . |
5 | One point which cries out for consideration is this : do the Christian doctrines which Hegel has transposed into his own metaphysical key still mean the same ? |
6 | ‘ I believe that it is quite wrong that you should refuse this reasonable request and I regret to say that your attitude is all too typical of the secretive nature of British government , which cries out for reform . ’ |
7 | So , it is not at all surprising that the church which launches out in faith will find the power of God at hand . |
8 | A post-mortem into the cause , effect and outcome of legitimate war aims this multiple Australian Oscar winner is a devastating indictment of the nasty scapegoat zeal which lives on after battle . |
9 | ‘ We are delighted with the results so far , especially the performance , which stands up to comparison with the rest of the sports car world . |
10 | The first seventeen chapters of Scale 2 provide a context for this discussion which looks back to Scale 1 . |
11 | In Wimsatt 's definition irony is a ‘ cognitive principle which shades off through paradox into the general principle of metaphor ’ ( Wimsatt and Brooks 1957 : 747 ) ; according to Brooks , it is the ‘ most general term that we have for the kind of qualification which the various elements in a context receive from the context ’ ( Brooks 1949 : 191 ) . |
12 | Molly uses soap and water to wash her face so we 're going to use the cleansing gel which lathers up like soap . |
13 | From paler forms of much smaller Tawny Owl , differs also in its long tail , which hangs down in flight , and relatively smaller eyes . |
14 | This is a highly intuitive environment which cuts down on training needs , but it is not to everyone 's taste , and it needs more development work behind the scenes if we have to write bespoke software . |
15 | The average household throws away 3kg of waste paper every week , most of which ends up in landfill where its breakdown contributes to the production of explosive methane gas . |
16 | As well as being simpler , this allows us to follow a historical sequence which leads up to serialism . |
17 | As such it is part of the legacy of a long tradition of humanist thought which stretches back to fifth-century BC Greece when the first decisive steps towards modern secularism were taken . |
18 | With these it is often initiated by acute tail-biting which gets out of hand ‘ and then the attacking pig or pigs continue to eat further into the back . |
19 | Stores controller in the purchasing department at Barlaston , Dave Lewis , is overseeing the data transfer which ties in with work he is undertaking as part of a three-year course at Staffordshire University . |
20 | ( a ) which sets out in summary form the most important information derived from your research and the main lessons to be learned from your interpretation of that information ; ( b ) which spells out the policy implications of your findings and , where appropriate , the follow-up actions that appear to be necessary ; and ( c ) which indicates what further research might be undertaken to pursue some of the findings uncovered by your own research . |
21 | The second technique ( which follows on without delay ) may be a kick to the ribs . |
22 | Most of the material which flows out under pressure from the capillaries is returned from the tissues by osmosis ; by virtue of the high concentration of plasma protein in the blood and the sparsity of proteins in tissue fluid . |
23 | At the top of the shell-shaped vineyard is a full , frontal , south-facing aspect which descends on to south-east and south-west-facing slopes , to a level of 120 metres on the lowest slopes . |
24 | Unlike other publishers ' products , BBC magazines serve two masters : they must provide a public service enhancing viewers ' and listeners ' enjoyment and appreciation of programmes ; and , in line with the government 's exhortation , they must generate profit which feeds back into programme making , reducing pressure on licence fees . |
25 | Keynes divided the demand for money into three types : ( a ) the transactions demand , which is the demand by firms and households for holdings of money to finance day-to-day transactions ; ( b ) precautionary demand , which arises out of uncertainty and the desire not to be caught short of ready cash ; and ( c ) the speculative demand , which is the demand for money as a financial asset and therefore part of a wealth portfolio . |
26 | PLAYER : Well , it 's a device , really — it makes the action that follows more or less comprehensible ; you understand , we are tied down to a language which makes up in obscurity what it lacks in style . |
27 | Or is it because they do not actually know what goes on at field sport events such as shooting ? |
28 | And anyway , when you think of what goes on on telly now , if it was true we 'd all be raving . ’ |
29 | They should neither remain aloof from what goes on in life , nor should they spend all their time solving industrial problems . |
30 | exposing erm this to society what goes on in society . |